Looking for articles? I am working through the disco-bibliography below. If you have any titles you want to see sooner rather than later, send me a note.
Bibliography / Discography
“Change Their Stories: John Mohawk on Revitalizations and Survival.”
Paper, Honoring John Mohawk’s Life & Work: 4th Annual Storytellers of the Americas Conference, Buffalo, New York, March 2008.
“The Changing Soundscape in Indian Country: Marketing Contemporary American Indian Music.”
Ethnopop, Popular Music Section, American Folklore Society, Fall 1992.
Don’t Mourn–Organize! Songs of Labor Songwriter Joe Hill
Sound recording. Notes and production for compilation of sound recordings. Smithsonian/Folkways SF 40026, 1990. Extended liner notes not previously published (except a few dozen copies).
“Elder Nigeajasha and other Mormon Indians moving westward.”
Invited paper, John Whitmer Historical Association conference, September 2000. Delivered to accept award “Best Dissertation” of 2000. Also published in the John Whitmer Historical Association Journal 24:111.
A Fish That’s a Song: Songs and Stories for Children
Inspired by the Hemphill Collection of the National Museum of American Art [sound recording]. Compiled with Andrew Connors. Smithsonian/Folkways SF 45037, 1990. Notable Children’s Recording 1991, American Library Association; Parents’ Choice Award 1991, Parents’ Music Resource Center.
“The Future in Song: A Yesterday’s Tomorrows Discography.”
Essay and discography for Yesterday’s Tomorrows exhibit, Smithsonian Institution and Federation of State Humanities Councils. 2002.
Historic Tintic Cookery.
Compilation of recipes and cooking advice from a turn-of-the-century newspaper. Eureka, Utah: Basin-Plateau Press, 1985.
“Joe Hill Incorporated: We Own Our Past.”
Article. Songs about Work: Essays in Occupational Culture for Richard A. Reuss. Edited by Archie Green. Bloomington: Special Publication of the Folklore Institute, No. 3, Indiana University, 1993.
“John Mohawk as Food Nonsubject.”
Paper, Honoring John Mohawk’s Life & Work: 4th Annual Storytellers of the Americas Conference, Buffalo, New York, March 2008.
“Joseph Smith in Iroquois Country.”
Invited guest post, Juvenile Instructor, June 2010.
“Joseph Smith in Iroquois Country: A Mormon Creation Story.”
Article, Essays on American Indian and Mormon History. Edited by P. Jane Hafen and Brenden W. Rensink. Salt Lake City: The University of Utah Press, 2019.
“The Labor Heritage Foundation: Teaching Labor Culture to the Labor Community.”
Paper, American Folklore Society annual meeting, St. John’s, Newfoundland, October 1991.
“Latter-day Confederacy of Many Nations.”
Flash fiction. States of Desert. Edited by William Morris. El Cerrito, California: Peculiar Pages, 2017.
“Mormons Playing Indian.”
Paper, American Folklore Society annual meeting, Salt Lake City, Utah, October 2004.
“New Mexico at the Smithsonian”
Photo CD. Compiled images, music, and narrative for exhibit The Information Age, National Museum of American History. Produced with representatives from National Museum of American History and Eastman Kodak Company, 1992.
“The Politicized American Legend of the Singing Hero: Joe Hill, Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, and Bruce Springsteen.”
M.A. thesis, American Civilization. The George Washington University, 1990.
“The Positive Force of harDCore Punk: The Role of Music in Creating Community and Political Responsibility.”
Paper, American Folklore Society annual meeting, Oakland, California, October 1990.
“Recorded Labor Song: Understanding the Artifact.”
Invited paper, conference on the folklore of work in honor of Archie Green, Durham, North Carolina, 1994.
“Smallering Mormon Stories.”
Invited paper, Seizing an Alternative: Toward an Ecological Civilization, Claremont, California, 2015.
“Smallering: A New Business Model.”
Fuzbaby, 2000. Reprinted frequently.
“Teaching Freedom of Speech and Turning Speech to Action: The Punk Community of Washington, D.C.”
Paper, American Studies Association annual meeting, Baltimore, Maryland, November 1991.
“Telling Stories about Mormons and Indians,”
Ph.D. dissertation, American Studies. State University of New York at Buffalo, 2000. Supervisor, John C. Mohawk.
“To say that Joseph Smith drew from Handsome Lake is wishful thinking.”
Panel presentation. Roundtable: New Directions and Questions for American Indian AND Mormon Histories. Mormon History Association conference, Park City, Utah, June 2021.
“Utah Woodworkers, 1850-1880.”
Research and label copy for Utah State History Museum exhibit “Finial, Dovetail, Spindle, and Fiddleback: Utah Handmade Furniture, 1847-1890,” 1984.
“We Don’t Need You. Does That Scare You?: Riot Grrrls Convention 1992, Washington, D.C.”
Article. Ethnopop, Popular Music Section, American Folklore Society, Fall 1992.
“You Can Shoot a Man, but You Can’t Kill a Song.”
Paper and audio presentation, panel: “The I.W.W. in Music, Poetry, and Cartoons,” conference: “Joe Hill, the I.W.W., and Western Labor Militancy,” Joe Hill Organizing Committee, AFL-CIO Labor Center, Salt Lake City, Utah, November 1990.
Your Grandmother Should Know: An Oral History of Cloth Diapers from Real Diaper Association.
Project Guidelines. RDA, San Francisco, California, 2006.