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Remembering StoriesMain MenuWhat is a decolonized museum?Mission Statement Students in American Studies 1906IConfronting Lost BelongingsTwelve Stories to Remember“To try and hold a Soul”: A Cradle from Kiowa peoplesby Alyxandra Todich'ii'ni LawsonCree Jacket: Evolution and Lost HistoryBy Arthur SunDiné Diyogí: Inspirations and CreationsBy Kara RoanhorseHaida Ladle: Haida Nationhood and SurvivanceBy Sierra EddHaungoah Hide Painting and the Recording of Culture: Beyond Art HistoryBy Axel GetzLakota Spirituality in Translation: The Art and Life of an Elk Dreamer’s Society Dance Shieldby Asante CrewsNavel Amulet: Challenging Paradigms of Repatriationby Maria Camila ArbelaezOctopus Bag: Athapaskan Women in the Colonial EncounterBy Yang GuoOjibwe Velvet VestBy Edward LiSled Dog BlanketBy: Stella ChongTohono O'odham Plaque: Cultural Preservation and Survivanceby Daniel MotleyWoman's Hood: Eastern Cree Memory and Resistanceby Jeanelle WheelerSuggested ReadingsContributorsAMST1906Iaed4f50f197b499a867ae57bb2cb4ef8741bb26a
Octopus Bag
12018-01-18T23:24:55-08:00Yang Guoc6a05ac1ded5c53ae52fe6ff3f21620a32b0b097184251Octopus Bag, Great Slave Lake, Mackenzie River region Athapaskan type, ca 1870. Wool, glass and metal beads, sinew, thread, ribbon, cotton cloth. L 46 cm. Collected 1894; purchase, Colcleugh 1930. 57-462. Haffenreffer Museum. Passionate Hobby.plain2018-01-18T23:24:55-08:00Yang Guoc6a05ac1ded5c53ae52fe6ff3f21620a32b0b097