In the “Museum Ethnography in the Native South” project (2020-present), we are focused on the study of ethnographic museum collections, archives, and exhibition practices through research work undertaken in selected museums of relevance to the study and representation of Indigenous peoples from the Southern United States (referred to in contemporary scholarly and Indigenous discourses as “the Native South”) and through consultation about these collections and exhibition practices with knowledgeable members of the relevant Indigenous communities of origin. In-museum and in-community research are equally crucial to work of this type in museum anthropology and museum-based folklore studies (together referred to here as museum ethnography).
The project is directed towards the writing of a comprehensive study of museums and material culture centering on the lives of Native American peoples of this region across space and time and the project also aims to make collections more accessible to—and useful to—the originating communities out of which they came.
Research visits to the Gilcrease Museum, the Peabody Museum of Natural History, the Florida Museum of Natural History, the Williamson Museum, the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, the Denver Art Museum, the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, and the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology are now being planned for fall 2020 (or whenever travel is again possible). Support for this research has been provided by the American Philosophical Society, the College Arts and Humanities Institute, the Social Science Research Funding Program at Indiana University and the Gilcrease Museum.
“Museum Ethnography in the Native South” is not yet a multi-institutional group project, but we hope that it can grow into a larger collaboration.
In this project we build on earlier work that Jason Jackson, and colleagues, have pursued related to the topic, including research at the American Museum of Natural History, the National Museum of Natural History, the Field Museum, the Philbrook Museum, the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, the Mathers Museum of World Cultures, the Columbus Museum, and in other repositories. It also connects with past exhibitions projects that Jason Jackson participated in, including Children of the Sun: Euchee Indian Culture and Tradition (Gilcrease Museum, 1998), Changing Florida Seminole Life, 1930-1960 (Mathers Museum of World Cultures, 1995), and Cherokee Craft, 1973 (Mathers Museum of World Cultures, 2016). Finally, it also relates to contemporary collections that he assembled for the Field Museum, the Gilcrease Museum, and the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History. Financial support for this earlier work was provided by a diversity of sources, including the American Museum of Natural History, the Columbus Museum, the Smithsonian Institution, the Summer Institute in Museum Anthropology, the Field Museum, the Fund for Folk Culture, and Indiana University.