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Wikipedia

Pretendian

A pretendian (portmanteau of pretend and Indian[1][2][3]) is a person who has falsely claimed Indigenous identity by claiming to be a citizen of a Native American or Indigenous Canadian tribal nation, or to be descended from Native ancestors.[4][5][6][7] The term is a pejorative colloquialism, and if used without evidence could be considered defamatory. As a practice, being a pretendian is considered an extreme form of cultural appropriation,[8] especially if that individual then asserts that they can represent, and speak for, communities they do not belong to.[3][8][9][10] It is sometimes also referred to as a form of fraud,[1] ethnic fraud or race shifting.[11][12]

Early false claims to Indigenous identity, often called "playing Indian", go back at least as far as the Boston Tea Party. There was a rise in pretendians after the 1960s for a number of reasons, such as the reestablishment of tribal sovereignty following the era of Indian termination policy, the media coverage of the Occupation of Alcatraz and the Wounded Knee Occupation, and the formation of Native American studies as a distinct form of area studies which led to the establishment of publishing programs and university departments specifically for or about Native American culture. At the same time, hippie and New Age subcultures marketed Native cultures as accessible, spiritual, and as a form of resistance to mainstream culture, leading to the rise of the plastic shaman or "culture vulture." By 1990, many years of pushback by Native Americans against pretendians resulted in the successful passage of the Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 (IACA) - a truth-in-advertising law which prohibits misrepresentation in marketing of American Indian or Alaska Native arts and crafts products within the United States.

While Indigenous communities have always self-policed and spread word of frauds, mainstream media and arts communities were often unaware, or did not act upon this information, until more recent decades. Since the 1990s and 2000s, a number of controversies regarding ethnic fraud have come to light and received coverage in mainstream media, leading to a broader awareness of pretendians in the world at large.

History of false claims to Indigenous identity

Early claims

Historian Philip J. Deloria has noted that European Americans "playing Indian" is a phenomenon that stretches back at least as far as the Boston Tea Party.[13] In his 1998 book Playing Indian, Deloria argues that white settlers have always played with stereotypical imagery of the peoples that were replaced during colonization, using these tropes to form a new national identity that can be seen as distinct from previous European identities.

Examples of white societies who have played Indian include, according to Deloria, the Improved Order of Red Men, Tammany Hall, and scouting societies like the Order of the Arrow. Individuals who made careers out of pretending an Indigenous identity include James Beckwourth,[14] Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance,[15] and Grey Owl.[7][16][17]

The academic Joel W. Martin noted that "an astonishing number of southerners assert they have a grandmother or great-grandmother who was some kind of Cherokee, often a princess", and that such myths serve settler purposes in aligning American frontier romance with southern regionalism and pride.[18]

Post-1960s: Rise of pretendians in academia, arts and political positions

The rise of pretendian identities post-1960s can be explained by a number of factors. The reestablishment and exercise of tribal sovereignty among tribal nations (following the era of Indian termination policy) meant that many individuals raised away from tribal communities sought, and still seek, to reestablish their status as tribal citizens or to recover connections to tribal traditions. Other tribal citizens, who had been raised in American Indian boarding schools under genocidal policies designed to erase their cultural identity, also revived tribal religious and cultural practices.

At the same time, in the years following the Occupation of Alcatraz, the formation of Native American studies as a distinct form of area studies, and the awarding of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction to Kiowa author N. Scott Momaday, publishing programs and university departments began to be established specifically for or about Native American culture. At the same time, hippie and New Age cultures marketed Native cultures as accessible, spiritual, and as a form of resistance to mainstream culture, leading to the rise of the plastic shaman or "culture vulture." All of this added up to a culture that was not inclined to disbelieve self-identification, and a wider societal impulse to claim Indigeneity.[19]

Elizabeth Cook-Lynn wrote of the influence of pretendians in academia and political positions:

[U]nscrupulous scholars in the discipline who had no stake in Native nationhood but who had achieved status in academia and held on to it through fraudulent claims to lndian Nation heritage and blood directed the discourse. This phenomenon took place following the "lndian Preference" regulations in new hiring practices at the Bureau of lndian Affairs in the early 1970s. Sometimes unprepared for such outright aggression or suffering polarization from the conflicts in the system, Native scholars in the academy often seemed to be silent witnesses to such occurrences. Their silence has not meant complicity. It has meant, more than anything, a feeling of utter powerlessness within the structures of strong mainstream institutions.[19]

By 1990, as noted in The New York Times Magazine, many years of "significant pushback by Native Americans against so-called Pretendians or Pretend Indians" resulted in the successful passage of the Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 (IACA) - a truth-in-advertising law which prohibits misrepresentation in marketing of American Indian or Alaska Native arts and crafts products within the United States.[2] The IACA makes it illegal for non-Natives to offer or display for sale, or sell, any art or craft product in a manner that falsely suggests it is Indian produced, an Indian product, or the product of a particular Indian or Indian Tribe or Indian arts and crafts organization. For a first-time violation of the Act, an individual can face civil or criminal penalties up to a $250,000 fine or a five-year prison term, or both. If a business violates the Act, it can face civil penalties or can be prosecuted and fined up to $1,000,000.[20]

2000s: Contemporary controversies

United States Poet Laureate Joy Harjo (Mvskoke) writes:

We ... have had to contend with an onslaught of what we call 'Pretendians', that is, non-Indigenous people assuming a Native identity. DNA tests are setting up other problems involving those who discover Native DNA [sic] in their bloodline. When individuals assert themselves as Native when they are not culturally Indigenous, and if they do not understand their tribal nation's history or participate in their tribal nation's society, who benefits? Not the people or communities of the identity being claimed. It is hard to see this as anything other than an individual's capitalist claim, just another version of a colonial offense.[21]

While Harjo refers to "Native DNA", there is no DNA test that can reliably confirm Native American ancestry, and no DNA test can indicate tribal origin.[22][23][24] Attempts by non-Natives to racialize Indigenous identity by DNA tests have been seen by Indigenous people as insensitive at best, often racist, politically and financially motivated, and dangerous to the survival of Indigenous cultures.[25][a]

While Indigenous communities have always self-policed and spread word of frauds, mainstream media and arts communities were often unaware, or did not act upon this information, until more recent decades.[8] However, since the 1990s and 2000s, a number of controversies regarding ethnic fraud have come to light and received coverage in mainstream media, leading to a broader awareness of pretendians in the world at large.[2][4][8]

In April 2018, APTN National News in Canada investigated how pretendians - in the film industry and in real life - promote "stereotypes, typecasting, and even, what is known as 'redface.'"[30] Rebecca Nagle (Cherokee Nation) voiced a similar position in 2019, writing for High Country News that,

Pretendians perpetuate the myth that Native identity is determined by the individual, not the tribe or community, directly undermining tribal sovereignty and Native self-determination. To protect the rights of Indigenous people, pretendians like Wages and Warren must be challenged and the retelling of their false narratives must be stopped.[31]

In January 2021, Navajo journalist Jacqueline Keeler began investigating the problem of settler self-indigenization in academia.[32] Working with other Natives in tribal enrollment departments, genealogists and historians, they began following up on the names many had been hearing for years in tribal circles were not actually Native, asking about current community connections as well as researching family histories "as far back as the 1600s" to see if they had any ancestors who were Native or had ever lived in a tribal community.[32] This research resulted in the Alleged Pretendians List,[33] of about 200 public figures in academia and entertainment, which Keeler self-published as a Google spreadsheet in 2021.[34]

While some people have criticized her for "conducting a witch hunt", Native leaders interviewed by VOA, such as Shawnee Chief Ben Barnes, report Keeler has strong support in Native circles.[32] Academic Dina Gilio-Whitaker, who reviewed Keeler’s documentation on Sacheen Littlefeather before it was published (see below), wrote that in her opinion Keeler did solid research.[35] Keeler has stressed that the list does not include private citizens who are "merely wannabes", but only those public figures who are monetizing and profiting from their claims to tribal identity and who claim to speak for Native American tribes.[34] She says the list is the product of decades of Native peoples' efforts at accountability.[32] Academic Kim TallBear writes that all those mentioned on the list are public figures who have profited from their alleged Indigenous status, that Keeler’s and her team’s list documents that the overwhelming number of those who benefit financially from pretendianism are white, and that these false claims are related to white supremacy and Indigenous erasure. Tallbear stresses that people who fabricate fraudulent claims are in no way the same as disconnected and reconnecting descendants who have real heritage, such as victims of government programs that scooped Indigenous children from their families.[36]

On September 13, 2021, the CBC News reported on their ongoing investigation into a "mysterious letter", dated 1845 (but never seen before 2011[37]) that is now believed to be a forgery. Based solely on the one ancestor listed in this letter, over 1,000 people were enrolled as Algonquin people, making them "potential beneficiaries of a massive pending land claim agreement involving almost $1 billion and more than 500 sq. kilometres of land".[4] The CBC investigation used handwriting analysis, and other methods of archival and historical evaluation to conclude the letter is a fake. This has led to the federally recognized Pikwakanagan First Nation to renew efforts to remove these "pretendian" claimants from their membership. In a statement to CBC News, the chief and council of the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan First Nation say that those they are seeking to remove "are fraudulently taking up Indigenous spaces in high academia and procurement opportunities."[4]

In October 2021, the CBC published an investigation into the status of Canadian academic Carrie Bourassa, who works as an Indigenous health expert and has claimed Métis, Anishinaabe and Tlingit status.[38] Research into her claims indicated that her ancestry is wholly European. In particular, the great-grandmother she claimed was Tlingit, Johanna Salaba, is well-documented as having emigrated from Russia in 1911; she was a Czech-speaking Russian.[38] In response, Bourassa admitted that she does not have status in the communities that she claimed but insisted that she does have some Indigenous ancestors and that she has hired other genealogists to search for them.[38] Bourassa was placed on immediate leave from her post at the Canadian Institutes of Health Research after her claims of Indigenous ancestry were found to be baseless.[39]

in November 2021, writing for the Toronto Star about the Bourassa situation as well as the actions of Joseph Boyden and Michelle Latimer, K.J. McCusker wrote,

We have been so heavily affected by stolen identities that the word “pretendian” has become a colloquially used term. Stolen identities undermine us to the point where we end up fodder for the tabloids the likes of Daily Mail. We become a spectacle for those who at best think of us as a Halloween costume idea. To people like Bourassa, we are indeed a costume, except one you get to wear all year long and benefit from professionally because it checks that box that was created to even-out the field that cannot ever be evened out just by a box.[5]

 
Sacheen Littlefeather at the 45th Academy Awards in 1973, which she attended on behalf of Marlon Brando

In October 2022, actor and activist Sacheen Littlefeather died. Shortly thereafter her sisters spoke to Navajo reporter Jacqueline Keeler and said that their family has no ties to the Apache or Yaqui tribes Sacheen had claimed.[40] As Littlefeather had been a beloved activist, these reports were met with controversy, challenges, and attacks on Keeler, largely on social media.[41] Academic Dina Gilio-Whitaker wrote that the truth about community leaders is "crucial", even if it means losing a "hero", and that the work Littlefeather did is still valuable, but there is a need to be honest about the harm done by pretendians, especially by those who manage to fool so many people that they become iconic:[35]

The stereotype Littlefeather embodied depended on non-Native people not knowing what they were looking at, or knowing what constitutes legitimate American Indian identity. There is a pattern that "pretendians" follow: They exploit people’s lack of knowledge about who American Indian people are by perpetuating ambiguity in a number of ways. Self-identification, or even DNA tests, for instance, obscure the fact that American Indians have not only a cultural relationship to a specific tribe and the United States but a legal one. Pretendians rarely can name any people they are related to in a Native community or in their family tree. They also just blatantly lie. Pretendianism is particularly prevalent in entertainment, publishing and academia. [...] Harm is caused when resources and even jobs go to fakes instead of the people they were intended for.[35]

Motivating factors

There are several possible explanations for why people adopt pretendian identities. Mnikȟówožu Lakota poet Trevino Brings Plenty writes: "To wear an underrepresented people's skin is enticing. I get it: to feast on struggle, to explore imagined roots; to lay the foundational work for academic jobs and publishing opportunities."[9]

Patrick Wolfe argues that the problem is more structural, stating that settler colonial ideology actively needs to erase and then reproduce Indigenous identity in order to create and justify claims to land and territory.[42] Deloria also explores the white American dual fascination with "the vanishing Indian" and the idea that, by "Playing Indian", the white man can then be the true inheritor and preserver of authentic American identity and connection to the land, aka "Indianness".[43]

Academics Kim TallBear (Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate), Dina Gilio-Whitaker (Colville), Robert Jago (Kwantlen First Nation), Rowland Robinson (Menominee), as well as journalist Jacqueline Keeler (Navajo Nation) and attorney Jean Teillet (great-grandniece of Louis Riel) also name white supremacy, in addition to ongoing settler colonialism, as core factors in the phenomenon.[36][35][44][45][46][47] In Settler Colonialism + Native Ghosts - "Community, Pretendians, & Heartbreak", Robinson posits that

Quite often this seems to be a cynical ploy towards some kind of anti-Indigenous political programme, as Darryl Leroux and others have demonstrated quite convincingly and handily regarding the explosion of groups in eastern Ontario, Québec, the Maritimes and parts of New England (2019) where quite often the absolutely astronomical growth in new claimants of Indigeneity can be clearly traced back to white supremacist, anti-Native, political projects in opposition to Aboriginal and Treaty rights. The assumption of Indigenous identity, through the growth of the so-called “Eastern Métis” movement, is clearly, at least in terms of its foundational leadership and organizational nature, antagonistic at a fundamental level towards Indigenous peoples and livelihoods.[45]

In October 2022, Teillet published the report, Indigenous Identity Fraud, for the University of Saskatchewan.[48] Discussing her research, she wrote for the Globe and Mail,

Who are these people? In the academy and government, they are mostly white women. In the hunting and fishing realm, they are mostly white men. ... What these claims have in common is that they are entirely disconnected from any living Indigenous people.[47]

Why do they do it? Indigenous impersonation is not an accident. People do it to get something they want – to stop Indigenous people from closing a land claim, to access hunting and fishing rights, or to gain access to jobs. And the payoff is well worth it. Imposters in the academy gain six-figure jobs, prestige, grants and tenure in exchange for a few lies. This kind of impersonation can only be carried out by those with immense privilege. It takes a person with enough knowledge of the gaps in the system to exploit them. It is also another colonial act. If colonialism has not eradicated Indigenous people by starvation, residential schools, the reserve system, taking their lands and languages, scooping their children, and doing everything to assimilate Indigenous peoples, then the final act is to become them. It’s a perverse kind of reverse assimilation.[47]

Notable examples

Individuals who have been accused of being a pretendian include:

Academic

  • Ward Churchill (born 1947)[49][50][51] – A professor of ethnic studies and political activist, Churchill built his career on his claims of Indigenous identity that were unsupported by membership in any tribe or by later genealogical research that failed to find any evidence of Indigenous ancestry.
  • Rachel Dolezal (born 1977)[52][53] – Although Dolezal is better known for claiming to be African-American, she began her career claiming to be Native American, telling people that she was born in a tipi and grew up hunting for food with bows and arrows.[53][54][55]
  • Susan Taffe Reed[56] – Former director of Dartmouth College's Native American Program. Fired in 2015 "after tribal officials and alumni accused her of misrepresenting herself as an American Indian".[57]
  • Andrea Smith[2][58][59][60][61] – Smith has built a career as a scholar, author and activist based on her claim that she is a Cherokee woman. Despite many articles and statements by Cherokee people and genealogists stating she has no Cherokee heritage or citizenship, she has never retracted her claim.
  • Terry Tafoya[62] – Now going by the name Ty Nolan. A former psychology professor at Evergreen State College, claimed Warm Springs and Taos Pueblo heritage. False claims reported by the Seattle Post Intelligencer in 2006.
  • Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond[63] - Lawyer; former academic; former judge. False claims to Indigenous anscestry exposed by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in 2022.

Film and television

Literary

 
Grey Owl (Archibald Stansfeld Belaney) feeding a Swiss roll to a beaver.
  • Joseph Boyden (born 1966)[77][78][10] – A novelist of Irish and Scottish ancestry best known for writing about First Nations culture who has no recognized tribal membership and whose familial and DNA-based claims to Indigenous ancestry have failed efforts at verification and were summarized by his ex-wife as "no DNA that can be traced to the First Nations people in Canada or the Americas at large".
  • Asa Earl Carter (1925–1979)[79][80] – Published using the pseudonym Forrest Carter as a supposed Cherokee. The founder of a Ku Klux Klan paramilitary group and a white supremacist politician under his birth name, he used his pseudonym to write popular books including The Rebel Outlaw: Josey Wales and The Education of Little Tree. Also known for co-authoring George Wallace's tagline, "Segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever".
  • Grey Owl (1888–1938)[7][16][17] – An Englishman born as Archibald Stansfeld Belaney who became a woodsman and wrote books and gave lectures as an activist primarily on environmental and conservationism issues, but was exposed after his death as having falsely claimed his Indigenous identity.
  • Jamake Highwater (1931–2001)[81][82][83] – A prolific American writer and journalist born as Jackie Marks who passed as Cherokee and used Native American culture as his writing theme although he was actually of eastern European Jewish ancestry.
  • Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance (1890–1932)[84] – The persona of the African-American journalist, writer and film actor Sylvester Clark Long, who falsely claimed Blackfoot and Cherokee heritage.
  • Brooke Medicine Eagle (born 1943)[85]  – the pseudonym of Brooke Edwards, an American author, singer-songwriter, and teacher specializing in a New Age interpretation of Native American religion.
  • Nasdijj (born 1950)[86][87][88] – The pseudonym of writer Tim Barrus, an American author and social worker best known for having published three "memoirs" between 2000 and 2004 while presenting himself as a Navajo.
  • Red Thunder Cloud (1919–1996)[89] – Born Cromwell Ashbie Hawkins West, also known as Carlos Westez, a singer, dancer, storyteller, and field researcher who was promoted as the last fluent speaker of the Catawba language, but was later revealed to have learned what little he knew of the language from books and to have been of African American heritage.
  • Sat-Okh (1920–2003), also known as Stanisław Supłatowicz, was a writer, artist, and soldier who served during World War II, that claimed to be of Polish and Shawnee descent. His origins were heavily disputed.[90]
  • Margaret Seltzer (born 1975)[91][92] – The writer of a "memoir" of her supposed experiences as a half–Native American foster child and gang member in South Central Los Angeles and was later revealed to have completely fabricated the story after growing up in an affluent neighborhood with no Native American background or heritage.
  • Erika T. Wurth is a novelist claiming Apache/Chickasaw/Cherokee descent whose novel White Horse was reviewed favourably in the New York Times.[93] In 2023, an article in the New York Post provided researched evidence to suggest that this was a family legend without basis in fact.[94]

Political

Visual arts

  • Gina Adams (born 1965)[107][108] – A visual artist and assistant professor at Emily Carr University,[109] Adams claims White Earth Ojibwe and Lakota ancestry,[110] and that her grandfather lived on the White Earth Indian Reservation and was removed at age eight to attend Carlisle Indian Industrial School,[110][111] which closed in 1918. Genealogists reported that Adams' grandfather "was a white man named Albert Theriault, who was born in Massachusetts to French-Canadian parents."[110] Adams has also claimed that her great-great-grandfather was Ojibwe chief Wabanquot (1830–1898),[110] a signer of the 1867 federal treaty with the Chippewa of the Mississippi. She has shown no evidence supporting any of these claims. She claims to be only a descendant, not an enrolled tribal member, so she and her gallery have so far successfully evaded the US Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990.
  • Jimmie Durham (1940–2021)[60][112] – An artist and activist who claimed one-quarter Cherokee descent by blood and to have grown up in a Cherokee-speaking community, Durham exhibited his work in the U.S. as Native American art until the passage of the Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 prohibiting false claims of Native production of arts and crafts that are offered for sale; he subsequently left the United States and has continued to claim Cherokee identity in European exhibitions. He was also formerly an organizer and central committee member for the American Indian Movement, including working as chief administrator for the International Indian Treaty Council. However, he has been reported to have "no known ties to any Cherokee community" and to be "neither enrolled nor eligible for citizenship" in any of the three federally recognized Cherokee tribes.
  • Yeffe Kimball (1906–1978)[113] – An artist who claimed to be Osage. Born Effie Goodman, she made Native American art under her assumed identify but also engaged in Native American political activism.
  • Cheyanne Turions[114][115] – An artist and art curator who claimed an Indigenous Canadian identity for grant applications until "outed" in 2021, Turions later stated that she had investigated her family's history and that as a result "I changed my self-identification to settler," and resigned from her position as a curator.[116]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ While there are some genetic markers that are more common among Native Americans, these markers are also found in Asia, and in other parts of the world.[26] The commercial DNA companies that offer ethnicity tests do not have a large enough pool of North American DNA to provide reliable matches. The most popular companies have admitted to having no North American DNA, and that their "matches" are to Central Asian and South or Central American populations; smaller companies may have a very small pool from one tribe who participated in a medical study.[27][28][29] The exploitation of Indigenous genetic material, like the theft of human remains, land and artifacts, has led to widespread distrust to outright boycotts of these companies by Native communities.[28][29] While a DNA test may bring up some markers associated with some Indigenous or Asian populations (and the science there is fairly problematic, as TallBear describes in her book Native American DNA), as Indigenous identity is based in citizenship, family and community, a genetic marker does not make a person Indigenous.[23]

References

  1. ^ a b Isai, Vjosa (October 15, 2022). "Doubts Over Indigenous Identity in Academia Spark 'Pretendian' Claims - Some Canadian universities now require additional proof to back up Indigenous heritage, replacing self-declaration policies". The New York Times. Retrieved October 28, 2022. "pretendians" (short for "pretend Indians")... Ms. TallBear said, there is no excuse for outright lies. "If they're lying and they've gotten job benefits or scholarship benefits, they should be required to figure out how to make restitution," she said, likening fake identity claims to falsifying academic credentials. "It's fraud."{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ a b c d Viren, Sarah (May 25, 2021). "The Native Scholar Who Wasn't". The New York Times Magazine. from the original on May 27, 2021. Retrieved December 27, 2021. the 1990s saw the beginning of what would eventually be significant pushback by Native Americans against so-called Pretendians or Pretend Indians
  3. ^ a b Robinson, Rowland (2020). "4. Interlude: Community, Pretendians, & Heartbreak". Settler Colonialism + Native Ghosts: An Autoethnographic Account of the Imaginarium of Late Capitalist/Colonialist Storytelling (Phd.). [Waterloo, Ontario] : University of Waterloo. p. 235. OCLC 1263615440. from the original on December 28, 2021. Retrieved December 28, 2021. [The] phenomenon of what I and many other Indigenous people have for some time called Pretendians, as well as the related, and very often overlapping, phenomenon of Fétis*. This not-new phenomenon, to put it perhaps overly simply, is the practice of settler individuals (and sometimes others, but primarily settlers) putting forth a false Indigenous identity, and placing themselves out in front of the world as Indigenous people, and sometimes even attempting to assert themselves in some way as a kind of voice of their supposed peoples. *Portmanteaus of "Pretend" and "Indian" and "Fake" and "Métis", respectively. Pretendian, as a descriptive term, has been around most of my life, to the extent that I am not sure that placing its origin on the timeline is readily possible.
  4. ^ a b c d Leo, Geoff (September 13, 2021). "Push to remove 'pretendians' from Algonquin membership rekindled after CBC investigation – Analysis revealed letter linked to 1,000 Indigenous ancestry claims is likely fake". CBC News. from the original on December 26, 2021. Retrieved December 26, 2021.
  5. ^ a b McCusker, K.J. (November 30, 2021). "The violence of pretending to be Indigenous - The recent call for organizing a Canada-wide dialogue about Indigenous identity by the First Nations University of Canada (FNUniv) is a solid step toward recognizing this as an ongoing problem. We must proactively address the issue of fraudulent proclamations". Toronto Star. from the original on December 24, 2021. Retrieved December 27, 2021. We have been so heavily affected by stolen identities that the word "pretendian" has become a colloquially used term.
  6. ^ Polleta, Maria (November 30, 2017). "'Pretendians': Elizabeth Warren not alone in making questionable claim to Native American heritage". The Arizona Republic. from the original on March 22, 2022. Retrieved November 11, 2021 – via AZCentral.,
  7. ^ a b c Irwin, Nigel (January 12, 2017). "Joseph Boyden's Apology and the Strange History of 'Pretendians' – Boyden is hardly the first person to be alleged to have faked Indigenous roots for material or spiritual gain". Vice Media. from the original on June 8, 2021. Retrieved July 8, 2021.
  8. ^ a b c d Ridgen, Melissa (January 28, 2021). "Pretendians and what to do with people who falsely say they're Indigenous". APTN News. from the original on July 13, 2021. Retrieved July 13, 2021. Pretendians – noun – A person who falsely claims to have Indigenous ancestry – meaning it's people who fake an Indigenous identity or dig up an old ancestor from hundreds of years ago to proclaim themselves as Indigenous today. They take up a lot of space and income from First Nation, Inuit and Metis Peoples.
  9. ^ a b Brings Plenty, Trevino (December 30, 2018). "Pretend Indian Exegesis: The Pretend Indian Uncanny Valley Hypothesis in Literature and Beyond". Transmotion. 4 (2): 142–152. doi:10.22024/UniKent/03/tm.648. from the original on November 25, 2021. Retrieved November 25, 2021.
  10. ^ a b "Joseph Boyden must take responsibility for misrepresenting heritage, says Indigenous writer". from the original on July 17, 2021. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  11. ^ Leroux, Darryl. "Raceshifting". Raceshifting. from the original on July 9, 2021. Retrieved July 8, 2021.
  12. ^ Leroux, Darryl R. J.; Gaudry, Adam (October 25, 2017). "Becoming Indigenous: The rise of Eastern Métis in Canada". The Conversation. Retrieved November 5, 2022. In 2011 there were over 250 self-identified Cherokee "tribes" in the U.S., according to anthropologist Circe Sturm. Like efforts by self-identified Métis, Sturm suggests that "race shifting" among white Americans to Cherokee identity is an attempt to "reclaim or create something they feel they have lost, and … to opt out of mainstream white society." The end result, however, has been the proliferation of self-identified Cherokee "tribes" in the U.S. and "Métis commmunities" in Eastern Canada with minimal connections to Indigenous peoples who they claim as long-ago ancestors.
  13. ^ Deloria, Philip J. (1999). Playing Indian. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 64–8, 91, 101, et al. ISBN 9780300080674. from the original on June 8, 2021. Retrieved February 28, 2019.
  14. ^ Laura Browder, " 'One Hundred Percent American': How a Slave, a Janitor, and a Former Klansmen Escaped Racial Categories by Becoming Indians", in Beyond the Binary: Reconstructing Cultural Identity in a Multicultural Context, ed. Timothy B. Powell, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press (1999)
  15. ^ Micco, Melinda (2000). "Tribal Re-Creations: Buffalo Child Long Lance and Black Seminole Narratives". In Hsu, Ruth; Franklin, Cynthia; Kosanke, Suzanne (eds.). Re-placing America: Conversations and Contestations. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i and the East-West Center.
  16. ^ a b Murray, John (April 20, 2018). "APTN Investigates: Cowboys and Pretendians". Aboriginal Peoples Television Network. from the original on October 7, 2021. Retrieved July 8, 2021. Canada's most famous pretendian is a man who called himself Grey Owl.
  17. ^ a b Smith, Donald B. (1990). From the Land of Shadows: the Making of Grey Owl. Saskatoon: Western Prairie Books.
  18. ^ Martin, Joel W. (1996). Bird, Elizabeth (ed.). 'My Grandmother Was a Cherokee Princess': Representations of Indians in Southern History. Dressing in Feathers: The Construction of the Indian in Popular Culture. London: Routledge.
  19. ^ a b Elizabeth Cook-Lynn. "Who Stole Native American Studies?" Wíčazo Ša Review, Vol. 12, No. 1. (Spring, 1997), p. 23.
  20. ^ "The Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990." 2006-09-25 at the Wayback Machine US Department of the Interior, Indian Arts and Crafts Board. Retrieved 24 May 2009.
  21. ^ Harjo, Joy (2020). "Introduction". In Harjo, Joy; Howe, Leanne; Foerster, Jennifer (eds.). When the Light of the World Was Subdued Our Songs Came Through: A Norton Anthology of Native Nations Poetry. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 4. ISBN 9780393356816. from the original on March 22, 2022. Retrieved December 30, 2021.
  22. ^ Kimberly TallBear (2003). "DNA, Blood, and Racializing the Tribe". Wíčazo Ša Review. University of Minnesota Press. 18 (1): 81–107. doi:10.1353/wic.2003.0008. JSTOR 140943. S2CID 201778441.
  23. ^ a b Geddes, Linda (February 5, 2014). "'There is no DNA test to prove you're Native American'". New Scientist. from the original on March 15, 2017. Retrieved May 31, 2019.
  24. ^ Brett Lee Shelton, J. D.; Jonathan Marks (2008). "Genetic Markers Not a Valid Test of Native Identity". Counsel for Responsible Genetics. from the original on July 25, 2008. Retrieved October 2, 2008.
  25. ^ TallBear, Kim (January 17, 2019). "Elizabeth Warren's claim to Cherokee ancestry is a form of violence - Be it by the barrel of a carbine or a mail-order DNA test, the American spirit demands the disappearance of Indigenous people". High Country News. from the original on November 22, 2021. Retrieved November 5, 2019.
  26. ^ Kim TallBear (2008). "Can DNA Determine Who is American Native American?". The WEYANOKE Association. Retrieved May 11, 2009.
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Further reading

  • Browder, Laura. Slippery Characters: Ethnic Impersonators and American Identities. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2000.
  • Chavers, Dean. "Around the Campfire: Fake Indians". Native Times, 2013.
  • Gaudry, Adam. "Communing with the Dead: The 'New Métis,' Métis Identity Appropriation, and the Displacement of Living Métis Culture.". American Indian Quarterly, 42, no. 2 (2018): pp. 162–90
  • Leroux, Darryl. Distorted Descent: White Claims to Indigenous Identity. University of Manitoba Press, 2019.
  • Leroux, Darryl. "Inventing an Indigenous People in Algonquin Territory". Canadian Journal of History, vol 56, pp. 71–72, 2021.
  • Leroux, Darryl. "Self-made Métis". Maisonneuve, 2018.
  • Reese, Debbie. Native? Or, not? A Resource List. American Indians in Children's Literature, February 2021.
  • Robinson, Rowland. Settler Colonialism + Native Ghosts: An Autoethnographic Account of the Imaginarium of Late Capitalist/Colonialist Storytelling, "Chapter 4. Interlude: Community, Pretendians, & Heartbreak". Waterloo, Ontario: University of Waterloo, 2020.
  • Sturm, Circe. Becoming Indian: The Struggle Over Cherokee Identity in the Twenty-First Century. Santa Fe: School for Advanced Research, 2010.
  • TallBear, Kim. Native American DNA: Tribal Belonging and the False Promise of Genetic Science. University of Minnesota Press, 2013.
  • Tuck, Eve; Yang, K. Wayne. "Decolonization is not a metaphor". Moves to Innocence I: Settler Nativism, pp. 10–13. Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, 2012.

External links

  • APTN Investigates: Cowboys and Pretendians APTN National News television report featuring many of the examples in this article, notably those in film
  • The Convenient "Pretendian", Canada Land podcast
  • "Indigenous 'Race Shifting' Red Flags: A Quick Primer for Reporters and Others", by Kim TallBear (Sisseton-Wahpeton)
  • "Playing Pretendian", Code Switch, NPR
  • Pretendians and Their Impact on Métis Identity in the Academy - University of Saskatchewan panel discussion including Maria Campbell (Métis) - 10 Dec 2021
  • The Pretendian Problem - Indian Country Today video report on pretendians and fake Métis - 28 Jan 2021
  • Raceshifting, resource on Eastern Euro-Canadians and Euro-Americans posting as Indigenous peoples
  • Unsettling Genealogies Conference - A Forum on Pseudo Indians, Race-Shifting, Pretendians, and Self-Indigenization in Media, Arts, Politics and the Academy - Series of 8 panel presentations in Spring, 2022, at Michigan State University.
    • Unmasking Pseudo Indians: Opening Remarks at by George Cornell (Ojibwe), Ben Barnes (Shawnee), Kim TallBear (Sisseton-Wahpeton) - Mar 21, 2022
  • Teillet Report on Indigenous Identity Fraud - October 2022 report for the University of Saskatchewan

pretendian, pretendian, portmanteau, pretend, indian, person, falsely, claimed, indigenous, identity, claiming, citizen, native, american, indigenous, canadian, tribal, nation, descended, from, native, ancestors, term, pejorative, colloquialism, used, without,. A pretendian portmanteau of pretend and Indian 1 2 3 is a person who has falsely claimed Indigenous identity by claiming to be a citizen of a Native American or Indigenous Canadian tribal nation or to be descended from Native ancestors 4 5 6 7 The term is a pejorative colloquialism and if used without evidence could be considered defamatory As a practice being a pretendian is considered an extreme form of cultural appropriation 8 especially if that individual then asserts that they can represent and speak for communities they do not belong to 3 8 9 10 It is sometimes also referred to as a form of fraud 1 ethnic fraud or race shifting 11 12 Early false claims to Indigenous identity often called playing Indian go back at least as far as the Boston Tea Party There was a rise in pretendians after the 1960s for a number of reasons such as the reestablishment of tribal sovereignty following the era of Indian termination policy the media coverage of the Occupation of Alcatraz and the Wounded Knee Occupation and the formation of Native American studies as a distinct form of area studies which led to the establishment of publishing programs and university departments specifically for or about Native American culture At the same time hippie and New Age subcultures marketed Native cultures as accessible spiritual and as a form of resistance to mainstream culture leading to the rise of the plastic shaman or culture vulture By 1990 many years of pushback by Native Americans against pretendians resulted in the successful passage of the Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 IACA a truth in advertising law which prohibits misrepresentation in marketing of American Indian or Alaska Native arts and crafts products within the United States While Indigenous communities have always self policed and spread word of frauds mainstream media and arts communities were often unaware or did not act upon this information until more recent decades Since the 1990s and 2000s a number of controversies regarding ethnic fraud have come to light and received coverage in mainstream media leading to a broader awareness of pretendians in the world at large Contents 1 History of false claims to Indigenous identity 1 1 Early claims 1 2 Post 1960s Rise of pretendians in academia arts and political positions 1 3 2000s Contemporary controversies 2 Motivating factors 3 Notable examples 3 1 Academic 3 2 Film and television 3 3 Literary 3 4 Political 3 5 Visual arts 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory of false claims to Indigenous identity EditEarly claims Edit Historian Philip J Deloria has noted that European Americans playing Indian is a phenomenon that stretches back at least as far as the Boston Tea Party 13 In his 1998 book Playing Indian Deloria argues that white settlers have always played with stereotypical imagery of the peoples that were replaced during colonization using these tropes to form a new national identity that can be seen as distinct from previous European identities Examples of white societies who have played Indian include according to Deloria the Improved Order of Red Men Tammany Hall and scouting societies like the Order of the Arrow Individuals who made careers out of pretending an Indigenous identity include James Beckwourth 14 Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance 15 and Grey Owl 7 16 17 The academic Joel W Martin noted that an astonishing number of southerners assert they have a grandmother or great grandmother who was some kind of Cherokee often a princess and that such myths serve settler purposes in aligning American frontier romance with southern regionalism and pride 18 Post 1960s Rise of pretendians in academia arts and political positions Edit The rise of pretendian identities post 1960s can be explained by a number of factors The reestablishment and exercise of tribal sovereignty among tribal nations following the era of Indian termination policy meant that many individuals raised away from tribal communities sought and still seek to reestablish their status as tribal citizens or to recover connections to tribal traditions Other tribal citizens who had been raised in American Indian boarding schools under genocidal policies designed to erase their cultural identity also revived tribal religious and cultural practices At the same time in the years following the Occupation of Alcatraz the formation of Native American studies as a distinct form of area studies and the awarding of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction to Kiowa author N Scott Momaday publishing programs and university departments began to be established specifically for or about Native American culture At the same time hippie and New Age cultures marketed Native cultures as accessible spiritual and as a form of resistance to mainstream culture leading to the rise of the plastic shaman or culture vulture All of this added up to a culture that was not inclined to disbelieve self identification and a wider societal impulse to claim Indigeneity 19 Elizabeth Cook Lynn wrote of the influence of pretendians in academia and political positions U nscrupulous scholars in the discipline who had no stake in Native nationhood but who had achieved status in academia and held on to it through fraudulent claims to lndian Nation heritage and blood directed the discourse This phenomenon took place following the lndian Preference regulations in new hiring practices at the Bureau of lndian Affairs in the early 1970s Sometimes unprepared for such outright aggression or suffering polarization from the conflicts in the system Native scholars in the academy often seemed to be silent witnesses to such occurrences Their silence has not meant complicity It has meant more than anything a feeling of utter powerlessness within the structures of strong mainstream institutions 19 By 1990 as noted in The New York Times Magazine many years of significant pushback by Native Americans against so called Pretendians or Pretend Indians resulted in the successful passage of the Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 IACA a truth in advertising law which prohibits misrepresentation in marketing of American Indian or Alaska Native arts and crafts products within the United States 2 The IACA makes it illegal for non Natives to offer or display for sale or sell any art or craft product in a manner that falsely suggests it is Indian produced an Indian product or the product of a particular Indian or Indian Tribe or Indian arts and crafts organization For a first time violation of the Act an individual can face civil or criminal penalties up to a 250 000 fine or a five year prison term or both If a business violates the Act it can face civil penalties or can be prosecuted and fined up to 1 000 000 20 2000s Contemporary controversies Edit United States Poet Laureate Joy Harjo Mvskoke writes We have had to contend with an onslaught of what we call Pretendians that is non Indigenous people assuming a Native identity DNA tests are setting up other problems involving those who discover Native DNA sic in their bloodline When individuals assert themselves as Native when they are not culturally Indigenous and if they do not understand their tribal nation s history or participate in their tribal nation s society who benefits Not the people or communities of the identity being claimed It is hard to see this as anything other than an individual s capitalist claim just another version of a colonial offense 21 While Harjo refers to Native DNA there is no DNA test that can reliably confirm Native American ancestry and no DNA test can indicate tribal origin 22 23 24 Attempts by non Natives to racialize Indigenous identity by DNA tests have been seen by Indigenous people as insensitive at best often racist politically and financially motivated and dangerous to the survival of Indigenous cultures 25 a While Indigenous communities have always self policed and spread word of frauds mainstream media and arts communities were often unaware or did not act upon this information until more recent decades 8 However since the 1990s and 2000s a number of controversies regarding ethnic fraud have come to light and received coverage in mainstream media leading to a broader awareness of pretendians in the world at large 2 4 8 In April 2018 APTN National News in Canada investigated how pretendians in the film industry and in real life promote stereotypes typecasting and even what is known as redface 30 Rebecca Nagle Cherokee Nation voiced a similar position in 2019 writing for High Country News that Pretendians perpetuate the myth that Native identity is determined by the individual not the tribe or community directly undermining tribal sovereignty and Native self determination To protect the rights of Indigenous people pretendians like Wages and Warren must be challenged and the retelling of their false narratives must be stopped 31 In January 2021 Navajo journalist Jacqueline Keeler began investigating the problem of settler self indigenization in academia 32 Working with other Natives in tribal enrollment departments genealogists and historians they began following up on the names many had been hearing for years in tribal circles were not actually Native asking about current community connections as well as researching family histories as far back as the 1600s to see if they had any ancestors who were Native or had ever lived in a tribal community 32 This research resulted in the Alleged Pretendians List 33 of about 200 public figures in academia and entertainment which Keeler self published as a Google spreadsheet in 2021 34 While some people have criticized her for conducting a witch hunt Native leaders interviewed by VOA such as Shawnee Chief Ben Barnes report Keeler has strong support in Native circles 32 Academic Dina Gilio Whitaker who reviewed Keeler s documentation on Sacheen Littlefeather before it was published see below wrote that in her opinion Keeler did solid research 35 Keeler has stressed that the list does not include private citizens who are merely wannabes but only those public figures who are monetizing and profiting from their claims to tribal identity and who claim to speak for Native American tribes 34 She says the list is the product of decades of Native peoples efforts at accountability 32 Academic Kim TallBear writes that all those mentioned on the list are public figures who have profited from their alleged Indigenous status that Keeler s and her team s list documents that the overwhelming number of those who benefit financially from pretendianism are white and that these false claims are related to white supremacy and Indigenous erasure Tallbear stresses that people who fabricate fraudulent claims are in no way the same as disconnected and reconnecting descendants who have real heritage such as victims of government programs that scooped Indigenous children from their families 36 On September 13 2021 the CBC News reported on their ongoing investigation into a mysterious letter dated 1845 but never seen before 2011 37 that is now believed to be a forgery Based solely on the one ancestor listed in this letter over 1 000 people were enrolled as Algonquin people making them potential beneficiaries of a massive pending land claim agreement involving almost 1 billion and more than 500 sq kilometres of land 4 The CBC investigation used handwriting analysis and other methods of archival and historical evaluation to conclude the letter is a fake This has led to the federally recognized Pikwakanagan First Nation to renew efforts to remove these pretendian claimants from their membership In a statement to CBC News the chief and council of the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan First Nation say that those they are seeking to remove are fraudulently taking up Indigenous spaces in high academia and procurement opportunities 4 In October 2021 the CBC published an investigation into the status of Canadian academic Carrie Bourassa who works as an Indigenous health expert and has claimed Metis Anishinaabe and Tlingit status 38 Research into her claims indicated that her ancestry is wholly European In particular the great grandmother she claimed was Tlingit Johanna Salaba is well documented as having emigrated from Russia in 1911 she was a Czech speaking Russian 38 In response Bourassa admitted that she does not have status in the communities that she claimed but insisted that she does have some Indigenous ancestors and that she has hired other genealogists to search for them 38 Bourassa was placed on immediate leave from her post at the Canadian Institutes of Health Research after her claims of Indigenous ancestry were found to be baseless 39 in November 2021 writing for the Toronto Star about the Bourassa situation as well as the actions of Joseph Boyden and Michelle Latimer K J McCusker wrote We have been so heavily affected by stolen identities that the word pretendian has become a colloquially used term Stolen identities undermine us to the point where we end up fodder for the tabloids the likes of Daily Mail We become a spectacle for those who at best think of us as a Halloween costume idea To people like Bourassa we are indeed a costume except one you get to wear all year long and benefit from professionally because it checks that box that was created to even out the field that cannot ever be evened out just by a box 5 Sacheen Littlefeather at the 45th Academy Awards in 1973 which she attended on behalf of Marlon Brando In October 2022 actor and activist Sacheen Littlefeather died Shortly thereafter her sisters spoke to Navajo reporter Jacqueline Keeler and said that their family has no ties to the Apache or Yaqui tribes Sacheen had claimed 40 As Littlefeather had been a beloved activist these reports were met with controversy challenges and attacks on Keeler largely on social media 41 Academic Dina Gilio Whitaker wrote that the truth about community leaders is crucial even if it means losing a hero and that the work Littlefeather did is still valuable but there is a need to be honest about the harm done by pretendians especially by those who manage to fool so many people that they become iconic 35 The stereotype Littlefeather embodied depended on non Native people not knowing what they were looking at or knowing what constitutes legitimate American Indian identity There is a pattern that pretendians follow They exploit people s lack of knowledge about who American Indian people are by perpetuating ambiguity in a number of ways Self identification or even DNA tests for instance obscure the fact that American Indians have not only a cultural relationship to a specific tribe and the United States but a legal one Pretendians rarely can name any people they are related to in a Native community or in their family tree They also just blatantly lie Pretendianism is particularly prevalent in entertainment publishing and academia Harm is caused when resources and even jobs go to fakes instead of the people they were intended for 35 Motivating factors EditThere are several possible explanations for why people adopt pretendian identities Mnikȟowozu Lakota poet Trevino Brings Plenty writes To wear an underrepresented people s skin is enticing I get it to feast on struggle to explore imagined roots to lay the foundational work for academic jobs and publishing opportunities 9 Patrick Wolfe argues that the problem is more structural stating that settler colonial ideology actively needs to erase and then reproduce Indigenous identity in order to create and justify claims to land and territory 42 Deloria also explores the white American dual fascination with the vanishing Indian and the idea that by Playing Indian the white man can then be the true inheritor and preserver of authentic American identity and connection to the land aka Indianness 43 Academics Kim TallBear Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate Dina Gilio Whitaker Colville Robert Jago Kwantlen First Nation Rowland Robinson Menominee as well as journalist Jacqueline Keeler Navajo Nation and attorney Jean Teillet great grandniece of Louis Riel also name white supremacy in addition to ongoing settler colonialism as core factors in the phenomenon 36 35 44 45 46 47 In Settler Colonialism Native Ghosts Community Pretendians amp Heartbreak Robinson posits that Quite often this seems to be a cynical ploy towards some kind of anti Indigenous political programme as Darryl Leroux and others have demonstrated quite convincingly and handily regarding the explosion of groups in eastern Ontario Quebec the Maritimes and parts of New England 2019 where quite often the absolutely astronomical growth in new claimants of Indigeneity can be clearly traced back to white supremacist anti Native political projects in opposition to Aboriginal and Treaty rights The assumption of Indigenous identity through the growth of the so called Eastern Metis movement is clearly at least in terms of its foundational leadership and organizational nature antagonistic at a fundamental level towards Indigenous peoples and livelihoods 45 In October 2022 Teillet published the report Indigenous Identity Fraud for the University of Saskatchewan 48 Discussing her research she wrote for the Globe and Mail Who are these people In the academy and government they are mostly white women In the hunting and fishing realm they are mostly white men What these claims have in common is that they are entirely disconnected from any living Indigenous people 47 Why do they do it Indigenous impersonation is not an accident People do it to get something they want to stop Indigenous people from closing a land claim to access hunting and fishing rights or to gain access to jobs And the payoff is well worth it Imposters in the academy gain six figure jobs prestige grants and tenure in exchange for a few lies This kind of impersonation can only be carried out by those with immense privilege It takes a person with enough knowledge of the gaps in the system to exploit them It is also another colonial act If colonialism has not eradicated Indigenous people by starvation residential schools the reserve system taking their lands and languages scooping their children and doing everything to assimilate Indigenous peoples then the final act is to become them It s a perverse kind of reverse assimilation 47 Notable examples EditIndividuals who have been accused of being a pretendian include Academic Edit Ward Churchill born 1947 49 50 51 A professor of ethnic studies and political activist Churchill built his career on his claims of Indigenous identity that were unsupported by membership in any tribe or by later genealogical research that failed to find any evidence of Indigenous ancestry Rachel Dolezal born 1977 52 53 Although Dolezal is better known for claiming to be African American she began her career claiming to be Native American telling people that she was born in a tipi and grew up hunting for food with bows and arrows 53 54 55 Susan Taffe Reed 56 Former director of Dartmouth College s Native American Program Fired in 2015 after tribal officials and alumni accused her of misrepresenting herself as an American Indian 57 Andrea Smith 2 58 59 60 61 Smith has built a career as a scholar author and activist based on her claim that she is a Cherokee woman Despite many articles and statements by Cherokee people and genealogists stating she has no Cherokee heritage or citizenship she has never retracted her claim Terry Tafoya 62 Now going by the name Ty Nolan A former psychology professor at Evergreen State College claimed Warm Springs and Taos Pueblo heritage False claims reported by the Seattle Post Intelligencer in 2006 Mary Ellen Turpel Lafond 63 Lawyer former academic former judge False claims to Indigenous anscestry exposed by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in 2022 Film and television Edit Iron Eyes Cody and Roy Rogers in North of the Great Divide 1950Kelsey Asbille born 1991 64 A Chinese American actress who has been cast in numerous Native American roles She has falsely claimed descent from the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians EBCI and a Cherokee identity 65 In response the EBCI issued a statement that Kelsey Asbille Chow is not now nor has she ever been an enrolled member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians No documentation was found in our records to support any claim that she descends from the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians 66 67 68 Iron Eyes Cody 1904 1999 69 70 Born as Espera Oscar de Corti and came to be known as The Crying Indian An Italian American actor most well known for his appearance in a 1970 s anti littering commercial Cody pretended to be from various tribes and denied his Italian heritage for the rest of his life Johnny Depp born 1963 71 44 72 An actor who has claimed both Creek and Cherokee descent on numerous occasions including when cast as Tonto in the 2013 film The Lone Ranger but who has no documented Native ancestry is not a citizen in any tribe 73 and is regarded as a non Indian 74 75 and a pretendian by Native leaders 72 71 44 During the promotion for The Lone Ranger LaDonna Harris a member of the Comanche Nation adopted Depp making him her honorary son but not a member of any tribe 76 Sacheen Littlefeather 1946 2022 35 Born Maria Louise Cruz an actress who took the stage in Plains style attire at the Academy Awards to decline the 1972 Best Actor award on behalf of Marlon Brando for The Godfather Presenting herself throughout her life as a White Mountain Apache and Yaqui activist for Native American rights who had grown up in a hovel without a toilet her sisters and others later said her heritage was actually half Mexican Hispanic of Spanish European descent and half white 40 An investigation by the Navajo writer activist Jacqueline Keeler and her team and reviewed by academics prior to publication revealed no apparent ties to any tribe in the United States 40 41 35 Literary Edit Grey Owl Archibald Stansfeld Belaney feeding a Swiss roll to a beaver Joseph Boyden born 1966 77 78 10 A novelist of Irish and Scottish ancestry best known for writing about First Nations culture who has no recognized tribal membership and whose familial and DNA based claims to Indigenous ancestry have failed efforts at verification and were summarized by his ex wife as no DNA that can be traced to the First Nations people in Canada or the Americas at large Asa Earl Carter 1925 1979 79 80 Published using the pseudonym Forrest Carter as a supposed Cherokee The founder of a Ku Klux Klan paramilitary group and a white supremacist politician under his birth name he used his pseudonym to write popular books including The Rebel Outlaw Josey Wales and The Education of Little Tree Also known for co authoring George Wallace s tagline Segregation now segregation tomorrow segregation forever Grey Owl 1888 1938 7 16 17 An Englishman born as Archibald Stansfeld Belaney who became a woodsman and wrote books and gave lectures as an activist primarily on environmental and conservationism issues but was exposed after his death as having falsely claimed his Indigenous identity Jamake Highwater 1931 2001 81 82 83 A prolific American writer and journalist born as Jackie Marks who passed as Cherokee and used Native American culture as his writing theme although he was actually of eastern European Jewish ancestry Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance 1890 1932 84 The persona of the African American journalist writer and film actor Sylvester Clark Long who falsely claimed Blackfoot and Cherokee heritage Brooke Medicine Eagle born 1943 85 the pseudonym of Brooke Edwards an American author singer songwriter and teacher specializing in a New Age interpretation of Native American religion Nasdijj born 1950 86 87 88 The pseudonym of writer Tim Barrus an American author and social worker best known for having published three memoirs between 2000 and 2004 while presenting himself as a Navajo Red Thunder Cloud 1919 1996 89 Born Cromwell Ashbie Hawkins West also known as Carlos Westez a singer dancer storyteller and field researcher who was promoted as the last fluent speaker of the Catawba language but was later revealed to have learned what little he knew of the language from books and to have been of African American heritage Sat Okh 1920 2003 also known as Stanislaw Suplatowicz was a writer artist and soldier who served during World War II that claimed to be of Polish and Shawnee descent His origins were heavily disputed 90 Margaret Seltzer born 1975 91 92 The writer of a memoir of her supposed experiences as a half Native American foster child and gang member in South Central Los Angeles and was later revealed to have completely fabricated the story after growing up in an affluent neighborhood with no Native American background or heritage Erika T Wurth is a novelist claiming Apache Chickasaw Cherokee descent whose novel White Horse was reviewed favourably in the New York Times 93 In 2023 an article in the New York Post provided researched evidence to suggest that this was a family legend without basis in fact 94 Political Edit Carrie Bourassa 95 A scientific director of the Indigenous health arm of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research who claimed to be Metis Anishnaabe and Tlingit She was placed on immediate leave after the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation CBC found no evidence to support her repeated claims of Indigenous ancestry Kaya Jones born 1984 96 A singer and model who joined the National Diversity Coalition for Trump as their Native American Ambassador she falsely claimed to be Apache 96 97 98 Danielle Smith Premier of Alberta who claimed to have a Cherokee great great grandmother who was a victim of the Trail of Tears An investigation from APTN National News found no evidence Smith s ancestors were Indigenous or part of the Trail of Tears 99 Elizabeth Warren born 1949 A U S Senator and presidential candidate who claimed Cherokee and Delaware ancestry She attempted to support her claim by releasing a video with DNA analysis but her DNA claims were rejected by the Cherokee Nation 100 with then Cherokee Nation Secretary of State Chuck Hoskin Jr now Principal Chief of the Nation stating in a press release in response Using a DNA test to lay claim to any connection to the Cherokee Nation or any tribal nation even vaguely is inappropriate and wrong 101 Warren eventually expressed regret and apologized for claiming American Indian heritage 102 103 104 Mary Ellen Turpel Lafond born 1963 A Canadian lawyer former judge Aboriginal Scholar and advocate falsely claimed Treaty Indian status as a Cree Nation member 105 106 Visual arts Edit Gina Adams born 1965 107 108 A visual artist and assistant professor at Emily Carr University 109 Adams claims White Earth Ojibwe and Lakota ancestry 110 and that her grandfather lived on the White Earth Indian Reservation and was removed at age eight to attend Carlisle Indian Industrial School 110 111 which closed in 1918 Genealogists reported that Adams grandfather was a white man named Albert Theriault who was born in Massachusetts to French Canadian parents 110 Adams has also claimed that her great great grandfather was Ojibwe chief Wabanquot 1830 1898 110 a signer of the 1867 federal treaty with the Chippewa of the Mississippi She has shown no evidence supporting any of these claims She claims to be only a descendant not an enrolled tribal member so she and her gallery have so far successfully evaded the US Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 Jimmie Durham 1940 2021 60 112 An artist and activist who claimed one quarter Cherokee descent by blood and to have grown up in a Cherokee speaking community Durham exhibited his work in the U S as Native American art until the passage of the Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 prohibiting false claims of Native production of arts and crafts that are offered for sale he subsequently left the United States and has continued to claim Cherokee identity in European exhibitions He was also formerly an organizer and central committee member for the American Indian Movement including working as chief administrator for the International Indian Treaty Council However he has been reported to have no known ties to any Cherokee community and to be neither enrolled nor eligible for citizenship in any of the three federally recognized Cherokee tribes Yeffe Kimball 1906 1978 113 An artist who claimed to be Osage Born Effie Goodman she made Native American art under her assumed identify but also engaged in Native American political activism Cheyanne Turions 114 115 An artist and art curator who claimed an Indigenous Canadian identity for grant applications until outed in 2021 Turions later stated that she had investigated her family s history and that as a result I changed my self identification to settler and resigned from her position as a curator 116 See also EditAustralian Aboriginal identity Cherokee descent Eatock v Bolt Australian case Eastern Metis Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 India pega no laco List of unrecognized tribes in the United States Native American ancestry Native Americans in German popular culture Passing racial identity Plastic shaman Racial misrepresentation Category American people who self identify as being of Native American descent Reel Injun A 2009 Canadian documentary film about the portrayal of Native Americans in Hollywood films Stolen Valor Act of 2013 US law Qalipu First NationNotes Edit While there are some genetic markers that are more common among Native Americans these markers are also found in Asia and in other parts of the world 26 The commercial DNA companies that offer ethnicity tests do not have a large enough pool of North American DNA to provide reliable matches The most popular companies have admitted to having no North American DNA and that their matches are to Central Asian and South or Central American populations smaller companies may have a very small pool from one tribe who participated in a medical study 27 28 29 The exploitation of Indigenous genetic material like the theft of human remains land and artifacts has led to widespread distrust to outright boycotts of these companies by Native communities 28 29 While a DNA test may bring up some markers associated with some Indigenous or Asian populations and the science there is fairly problematic as TallBear describes in her book Native American DNA as Indigenous identity is based in citizenship family and community a genetic marker does not make a person Indigenous 23 References Edit a b Isai Vjosa October 15 2022 Doubts Over Indigenous Identity in Academia Spark Pretendian Claims Some Canadian universities now require additional proof to back up Indigenous heritage replacing self declaration policies The New York Times Retrieved October 28 2022 pretendians short for pretend Indians Ms TallBear said there is no excuse for outright lies If they re lying and they ve gotten job benefits or scholarship benefits they should be required to figure out how to make restitution she said likening fake identity claims to falsifying academic credentials It s fraud a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link a b c d Viren Sarah May 25 2021 The Native Scholar Who Wasn t The New York Times Magazine Archived from the original on May 27 2021 Retrieved December 27 2021 the 1990s saw the beginning of what would eventually be significant pushback by Native Americans against so called Pretendians or Pretend Indians a b Robinson Rowland 2020 4 Interlude Community Pretendians amp Heartbreak Settler Colonialism Native Ghosts An Autoethnographic Account of the Imaginarium of Late Capitalist Colonialist Storytelling Phd Waterloo Ontario University of Waterloo p 235 OCLC 1263615440 Archived from the original on December 28 2021 Retrieved December 28 2021 The phenomenon of what I and many other Indigenous people have for some time called Pretendians as well as the related and very often overlapping phenomenon of Fetis This not new phenomenon to put it perhaps overly simply is the practice of settler individuals and sometimes others but primarily settlers putting forth a false Indigenous identity and placing themselves out in front of the world as Indigenous people and sometimes even attempting to assert themselves in some way as a kind of voice of their supposed peoples Portmanteaus of Pretend and Indian and Fake and Metis respectively Pretendian as a descriptive term has been around most of my life to the extent that I am not sure that placing its origin on the timeline is readily possible a b c d Leo Geoff September 13 2021 Push to remove pretendians from Algonquin membership rekindled after CBC investigation Analysis revealed letter linked to 1 000 Indigenous ancestry claims is likely fake CBC News Archived from the original on December 26 2021 Retrieved December 26 2021 a b McCusker K J November 30 2021 The violence of pretending to be Indigenous The recent call for organizing a Canada wide dialogue about Indigenous identity by the First Nations University of Canada FNUniv is a solid step toward recognizing this as an ongoing problem We must proactively address the issue of fraudulent proclamations Toronto Star Archived from the original on December 24 2021 Retrieved December 27 2021 We have been so heavily affected by stolen identities that the word pretendian has become a colloquially used term Polleta Maria November 30 2017 Pretendians Elizabeth Warren not alone in making questionable claim to Native American heritage The Arizona Republic Archived from the original on March 22 2022 Retrieved November 11 2021 via AZCentral a b c Irwin Nigel January 12 2017 Joseph Boyden s Apology and the Strange History of Pretendians Boyden is hardly the first person to be alleged to have faked Indigenous roots for material or spiritual gain Vice Media Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved July 8 2021 a b c d Ridgen Melissa January 28 2021 Pretendians and what to do with people who falsely say they re Indigenous APTN News Archived from the original on July 13 2021 Retrieved July 13 2021 Pretendians noun A person who falsely claims to have Indigenous ancestry meaning it s people who fake an Indigenous identity or dig up an old ancestor from hundreds of years ago to proclaim themselves as Indigenous today They take up a lot of space and income from First Nation Inuit and Metis Peoples a b Brings Plenty Trevino December 30 2018 Pretend Indian Exegesis The Pretend Indian Uncanny Valley Hypothesis in Literature and Beyond Transmotion 4 2 142 152 doi 10 22024 UniKent 03 tm 648 Archived from the original on November 25 2021 Retrieved November 25 2021 a b Joseph Boyden must take responsibility for misrepresenting heritage says Indigenous writer Archived from the original on July 17 2021 Retrieved January 20 2017 Leroux Darryl Raceshifting Raceshifting Archived from the original on July 9 2021 Retrieved July 8 2021 Leroux Darryl R J Gaudry Adam October 25 2017 Becoming Indigenous The rise of Eastern Metis in Canada The Conversation Retrieved November 5 2022 In 2011 there were over 250 self identified Cherokee tribes in the U S according to anthropologist Circe Sturm Like efforts by self identified Metis Sturm suggests that race shifting among white Americans to Cherokee identity is an attempt to reclaim or create something they feel they have lost and to opt out of mainstream white society The end result however has been the proliferation of self identified Cherokee tribes in the U S and Metis commmunities in Eastern Canada with minimal connections to Indigenous peoples who they claim as long ago ancestors Deloria Philip J 1999 Playing Indian New Haven Yale University Press pp 64 8 91 101 et al ISBN 9780300080674 Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved February 28 2019 Laura Browder One Hundred Percent American How a Slave a Janitor and a Former Klansmen Escaped Racial Categories by Becoming Indians in Beyond the Binary Reconstructing Cultural Identity in a Multicultural Context ed Timothy B Powell New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press 1999 Micco Melinda 2000 Tribal Re Creations Buffalo Child Long Lance and Black Seminole Narratives In Hsu Ruth Franklin Cynthia Kosanke Suzanne eds Re placing America Conversations and Contestations Honolulu University of Hawai i and the East West Center a b Murray John April 20 2018 APTN Investigates Cowboys and Pretendians Aboriginal Peoples Television Network Archived from the original on October 7 2021 Retrieved July 8 2021 Canada s most famous pretendian is a man who called himself Grey Owl a b Smith Donald B 1990 From the Land of Shadows the Making of Grey Owl Saskatoon Western Prairie Books Martin Joel W 1996 Bird Elizabeth ed My Grandmother Was a Cherokee Princess Representations of Indians in Southern History Dressing in Feathers The Construction of the Indian in Popular Culture London Routledge a b Elizabeth Cook Lynn Who Stole Native American Studies Wicazo Sa Review Vol 12 No 1 Spring 1997 p 23 The Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 Archived 2006 09 25 at the Wayback Machine US Department of the Interior Indian Arts and Crafts Board Retrieved 24 May 2009 Harjo Joy 2020 Introduction In Harjo Joy Howe Leanne Foerster Jennifer eds When the Light of the World Was Subdued Our Songs Came Through A Norton Anthology of Native Nations Poetry New York W W Norton amp Company p 4 ISBN 9780393356816 Archived from the original on March 22 2022 Retrieved December 30 2021 Kimberly TallBear 2003 DNA Blood and Racializing the Tribe Wicazo Sa Review University of Minnesota Press 18 1 81 107 doi 10 1353 wic 2003 0008 JSTOR 140943 S2CID 201778441 a b Geddes Linda February 5 2014 There is no DNA test to prove you re Native American New Scientist Archived from the original on March 15 2017 Retrieved May 31 2019 Brett Lee Shelton J D Jonathan Marks 2008 Genetic Markers Not a Valid Test of Native Identity Counsel for Responsible Genetics Archived from the original on July 25 2008 Retrieved October 2 2008 TallBear Kim January 17 2019 Elizabeth Warren s claim to Cherokee ancestry is a form of violence Be it by the barrel of a carbine or a mail order DNA test the American spirit demands the disappearance of Indigenous people High Country News Archived from the original on November 22 2021 Retrieved November 5 2019 Kim TallBear 2008 Can DNA Determine Who is American Native American The WEYANOKE Association Retrieved May 11 2009 Tennant Amie Bowser February 9 2018 Why Your DNA Results Didn t Show Your Native American Ancestry The Genealogy Reporter Archived from the original on December 5 2018 Retrieved May 28 2019 a b Suresh Arvind October 6 2016 Native Americans fear potential exploitation of their DNA Genetic Literacy Project Archived from the original on November 23 2021 Retrieved September 7 2021 a b Carey Teresa L May 9 2019 DNA tests stand on shaky ground to define Native American identity National Human Genome Research Institute Archived from the original on January 11 2022 Retrieved September 7 2021 Murray John April 20 2018 APTN Investigates Cowboys and Pretendians Aboriginal Peoples Television Network Archived from the original on October 7 2021 Retrieved July 8 2021 Actors who do this are sometimes called pretendians but that term is also used for people who play at being Indigenous in their real life Nagle Rebecca April 2 2019 How pretendians undermine the rights of Indigenous people We must guard against harmful public discourse about Native identity as much as we guard against harmful policy High Country News Archived from the original on June 19 2019 Retrieved December 26 2021 a b c d Hilleary Cecily April 3 2022 Across North America academics have allegedly manufactured indigenous identity for personal professional and financial gain Voice of America Retrieved October 27 2022 Cyca Michelle September 16 2022 The Curious Case of Gina Adams A Pretendian investigation She was hired by Emily Carr University in an effort to recruit Indigenous faculty Then questions arose about her identity Maclean s Retrieved October 23 2022 a b Keeler Jacqueline May 5 2020 The Alleged Pretendians List Pollen Nation Magazine Archived from the original on June 8 2021 a b c d e f Gilio Whitaker Dina October 28 2022 Sacheen Littlefeather and ethnic fraud why the truth is crucial even if it means losing an American Indian hero The Conversation Retrieved October 29 2022 a b TallBear Kim May 10 2021 Playing Indian Constitutes a Structural Form of Colonial Theft and It Must be Tackled Unsettle Retrieved May 30 2021 Leo Geoff August 9 2021 Mysterious letter linking 1 000 people to 1B Algonquin treaty likely fake CBC investigation finds Author of conspiracy theory books says letter was dropped in his mailbox in 2011 CBC News Archived from the original on December 26 2021 Retrieved December 26 2021 a b c Leo Geoff October 27 2021 Indigenous or pretender CBC News Archived from the original on October 28 2021 Retrieved October 28 2021 Leo Geoff November 1 2021 Health scientist Carrie Bourassa on immediate leave after scrutiny of her claim she s Indigenous CBC ca Archived from the original on November 29 2021 Retrieved December 20 2021 a b c Keeler Jacqueline October 22 2022 Sacheen Littlefeather was a Native American icon Her sisters say she was an ethnic fraud San Francisco Chronicle a b Hoffman Jordan October 22 2022 Sacheen Littlefeather s Sisters Say Claim of American Indian Heritage Was A Fraud Vanity Fair Wolfe Patrick 2006 Settler colonialism and the elimination of the native Journal of Genocide Research 8 4 387 409 DOI 10 1080 14623520601056240 Deloria Philip J 1999 Playing Indian New Haven Yale University Press pp 64 5 91 101 et al ISBN 9780300080674 Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved February 28 2019 a b c Jago Robert February 1 2021 Criminalizing Pretendians is not the answer we need to give First Nations control over grants National Post Archived from the original on July 17 2021 Retrieved July 17 2021 a b Robinson Rowland 2020 4 Interlude Community Pretendians amp Heartbreak Settler Colonialism Native Ghosts An Autoethnographic Account of the Imaginarium of Late Capitalist Colonialist Storytelling Phd Waterloo Ontario University of Waterloo p 236 OCLC 1263615440 Retrieved December 28 2021 Jacqueline Keeler January 28 2021 Pretendians and what to do with people who falsely say they re Indigenous Television broadcast Interviewed by Ridgen Melissa Winnipeg APTN News Event occurs at 13 47 Archived from the original on July 13 2021 Retrieved November 18 2022 White people are so accustomed they are centered by white supremacy to such an extent they feel no compunction about doing this maybe even they covet what we have and they feel we don t deserve it And so they decide they can perform the identity better than we can And they can for a white audience White people like to see other white people in redface a b c Teillet Jean November 11 2022 There is nothing innocent about the false presumption of Indigenous identity The Globe and Mail Retrieved November 17 2022 Teillet Jean October 17 2022 Teillet Report on Indigenous Identity Fraud PDF Report University of Saskatchewan Retrieved November 17 2022 Richardson Valerie Report on Conclusion of Preliminary Review in the Matter of Professor Ward Churchill Archived June 29 2012 at the Wayback Machine University of Colorado at Boulder 2005 Retrieved 26 July 2009 Brown Thomas Is Ward Churchill the New Michael Bellesiles Archived July 26 2010 at the Wayback Machine George Mason University s History News Network 14 March 2005 Retrieved 26 July 2009 Harjo Suzan Shown August 3 2007 Ward Churchill The White Man s Burden Indian Country Today Archived from the original on March 22 2022 Retrieved July 26 2009 Midge Tiffany April 17 2017 I Knew Rachel Dolezal Back When She Was Indigenous Indian Country Today Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved 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honorary degrees or we ll return ours say high profile Indigenous women CBC News Retrieved December 15 2022 Maillard Kevin Noble August 1 2017 What s So Hard About Casting Indian Actors in Indian Roles The New York Times Retrieved October 20 2021 Comita Jenny November 26 2018 Yellowstone Star Kelsey Asbille Grows Into Her Cherokee Identity Onscreen W Magazine Retrieved December 21 2021 Kelsey Chow speaks Chinese for LA Teen Festival YouTube Archived from the original on December 15 2021 Retrieved June 4 2013 Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Says Wind River and Yellowstone Actress is Not Enrolled nor Descended from Tribe Pechanga net September 19 2017 Archived from the original on September 25 2017 Retrieved September 25 2017 Yu Heather Johnson September 21 2017 Eurasian Actress Exposed After Falsely Claiming She Was Part Native American Over Film Role NextShark Retrieved August 1 2019 Waldman Amy January 5 1999 Iron Eyes Cody 94 an Actor And Tearful Anti Littering Icon The New York 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Archived from the original on July 8 2015 Retrieved August 8 2011 My great grandmother was quite a bit of Native American she grew up Cherokee or maybe Creek Indian Makes sense in terms of coming from Kentucky which is rife with Cherokee and Creek Disney Exploiting Confusion About Whether Depp Has Indian Blood June 17 2013 Archived from the original on July 5 2013 Retrieved August 13 2013 Toensing Gale Courney June 11 2013 Sonny Skyhawk on Johnny Depp Disney Indian Stereotypes and White Film Indians Archived from the original on July 15 2013 Retrieved May 3 2019 Yet Disney has the gall and audacity to knowingly cast a non Native person in the role of an established Native character American Indians in Film and Television s argument is not so much with Johnny Depp a charlatan at his best as it is with the machinations of Disney proper The controversy that will haunt this endeavor and ultimately cause its demise at the box office is the behind the scenes concerted effort and forced manipulation by Disney to attempt to sell Johnny Depp as an American Indian American Indians as assimilated and mainstream as they may be today remain adamantly resistant to anyone who falsely claims to be one of theirs Moore Nohemi M May 15 2022 Johnny Depp s History of Racism and Broken Promises to Native Americans Eight Tribes Archived from the original on December 6 2022 Retrieved June 21 2022 While promoting The Lone Ranger Depp was made an honorary son by LaDonna Harris a member of the Comanche Nation Although now an honorary member of his family he is not a member of any tribe Jago Robert December 24 2016 Why I Question Joseph Boyden s Indigenous Ancestry Canadaland Archived from the original on February 16 2020 Retrieved June 8 2021 Author Joseph Boyden s shape shifting Indigenous identity APTN National News Retrieved December 23 2016 Carter Dan T October 4 1991 The Transformation of a Klansman The New York Times Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved June 8 2021 Gates Henry Louis Jr November 24 1991 Authenticity or the Lesson of Little Tree PDF The New York Times Book Review a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link permanent dead link Nagel Joane September 25 1997 American Indian Ethnic Renewal Red Power and the Resurgence of Identity and Culture Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512063 9 Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved June 8 2021 Hoxie Frederick E Encyclopedia of North American Indians Native American History Culture and Life From Paleo Indians to the Present Boston Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2006 191 2 retrieved through Google Books 26 July 2009 ISBN 978 0 395 66921 1 Weaver Jace November 1 2001 Other Words American Indian Literature Law and Culture University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3352 2 Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved June 8 2021 Garroutte Eva Marie 2003 Real Indians Identity and the Survival of Native America Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 0 520 22977 0 OCLC 237798744 Grimes Ronald L 2002 Deeply Into the Bone Re Inventing Rites of Passage University of California Press p 143 ISBN 9780520236752 Italie Hillel Identity of Indian Memoirist is Disputed Associated Press ABCNews Go Com January 25 2006 Retrieved July 30 2006 Maul Kimberly Agent Confirms Author Nasdijj and Gay Erotica Writer Timothy Barrus Are Same Person The Book Standard January 27 2006 Retrieved July 30 2006 Italie Hillel January 31 2006 Publisher stops issuing memoirs by disputed author Times Daily Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved January 4 2020 via Google News Archive Goddard Ives 2000 The Identity of Red Thunder Cloud PDF The Newsletter Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas 19 1 7 10 Archived PDF from the original on June 24 2021 Retrieved December 21 2021 Katarzyna Krepulec Stanislaw Suplatowicz Niezwykla biografia Sat Okha czyli jak sie zostaje legenda UMCS Lublin 2004 Rich M March 4 2008 Gang Memoir Turning Page Is Pure Fiction The New York Times Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved March 4 2008 Pool Bob Trounson Rebecca March 4 2008 Memoir a fake author says Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved June 8 2021 van der Berg Laura October 30 2022 An Ancient Bracelet a Personal Haunting and an Overdue Reckoning New York Times Retrieved January 26 2023 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Vincent Isabel January 25 2023 Native American novelist praised by GMA NYT accused of being a Pretendian New York Post Retrieved January 26 2023 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Leo Geoff November 1 2021 Health scientist Carrie Bourassa on immediate leave after scrutiny of her claim she s Indigenous CBC ca Archived from the original on November 29 2021 Retrieved December 20 2021 a b Furdyk Brent December 31 2017 Cher Refuses To Apologize For Half Breed After Twitter War Fuelled By Trump s Diversity Coalition Appointee ET Canada Archived from the original on January 8 2018 Retrieved January 7 2018 Numerous Twitter users have balked at her claims referring to Jones as a pretendian If you need evidence that Kayla is absolutely a pretendian here it is Kaya Jones The Apache Native American Ambassador For Trump Stop Tribal Genocide December 26 2017 Archived from the original on January 30 2018 Retrieved January 7 2018 Hughes Art December 26 2017 Monday January 8 2018 Native American ambassador Kaya Jones Native America Calling Your National Electronic Talking Circle Archived from the original on January 7 2018 Retrieved January 8 2018 Paradis Danielle November 16 2022 Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she has Cherokee roots but the records don t back that up APTN a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Choi Matthew February 6 2019 Warren suggests American Indian might appear on other documents Politico Archived from the original on September 21 2019 Retrieved September 21 2019 Hoskin Jr Chuck October 15 2018 Cherokee Nation responds to Senator Warren s DNA test Cherokee Nation Archived from the original on October 16 2018 Retrieved November 7 2021 Olmstead Molly February 6 2019 Report Elizabeth Warren Identified as American Indian in Texas Bar Registration Slate Magazine Archived from the original on August 22 2019 Retrieved August 22 2019 Linskey Annie February 5 2019 Elizabeth Warren apologizes for calling herself Native American The Washington Post Archived from the original on February 8 2019 Retrieved February 9 2019 Tarlo Shira February 6 2019 Elizabeth Warren apologizes for identifying as Native American on Texas bar registration card Salon Archived from the original on February 8 2019 Retrieved February 9 2019 Leo Geoff October 12 2022 Disputed history CBC Retrieved November 21 2022 Leo Geoff November 21 2022 Birth certificate contradicts Mary Ellen Turpel Lafond s account of her father s parentage and ancestry CBC Retrieved November 21 2022 Shanahan Mark May 31 2021 Should museums verify claims of Indigenous ancestry Fruitlands show postponed over this profoundly divisive issue The Boston Globe Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved June 8 2021 Agoyo Acee June 2 2021 Museum won t verify claims of tribal ancestry after artists withdraw from show Indianz Com Archived from the original on June 8 2021 Retrieved June 8 2021 Gina Adams Emily Carr University Archived from the original on January 22 2022 Retrieved January 22 2022 a b c d Cyca Michelle September 6 2022 The Curious Case of Gina Adams A Pretendian investigation Maclean s Retrieved September 7 2022 Adams Gina Gina Adams Contemporary Hybrid Artist Archived from the original on January 22 2022 Retrieved January 22 2022 Watts Ph D Cara Cowan et al June 26 2017 Dear Unsuspecting Public Jimmie Durham Is a Trickster Jimmie Durham s Indigenous identity has always been a fabrication and remains one Indian Country Media Network Archived from the original on July 22 2017 Retrieved July 21 2017 Durham is neither enrolled nor eligible for citizenship in any of the three federally recognized and historical Cherokee Tribes the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians of Oklahoma and the Cherokee Nation Anthes Bill Becoming Indian The Self Invention of Yeffe Kimball Native Moderns American Indian Painting 1940 1960 Durham NC Duke University Press 2006 117 141 ISBN 0 8223 3866 1 Vancouver curator s Indigenous ancestry claims panned as pretendian Vancouver Sun March 24 2021 Archived from the original on June 16 2021 Retrieved June 8 2021 Fung Amy June 2 2021 Who Bears the Steep Costs of Ethnic Fraud Hyperallergic Archived from the original on June 4 2021 Retrieved June 8 2021 turions cheyanne April 19 2021 Uncategorized CHEYANNE TURIONS Dialogue around curatorial practice Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved November 9 2021 Further reading EditBrowder Laura Slippery Characters Ethnic Impersonators and American Identities Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2000 Chavers Dean Around the Campfire Fake Indians Native Times 2013 Gaudry Adam Communing with the Dead The New Metis Metis Identity Appropriation and the Displacement of Living Metis Culture American Indian Quarterly 42 no 2 2018 pp 162 90 Leroux Darryl Distorted Descent White Claims to Indigenous Identity University of Manitoba Press 2019 Leroux Darryl Inventing an Indigenous People in Algonquin Territory Canadian Journal of History vol 56 pp 71 72 2021 Leroux Darryl Self made Metis Maisonneuve 2018 Reese Debbie Native Or not A Resource List American Indians in Children s Literature February 2021 Robinson Rowland Settler Colonialism Native Ghosts An Autoethnographic Account of the Imaginarium of Late Capitalist Colonialist Storytelling Chapter 4 Interlude Community Pretendians amp Heartbreak Waterloo Ontario University of Waterloo 2020 Sturm Circe Becoming Indian The Struggle Over Cherokee Identity in the Twenty First Century Santa Fe School for Advanced Research 2010 TallBear Kim Native American DNA Tribal Belonging and the False Promise of Genetic Science University of Minnesota Press 2013 Tuck Eve Yang K Wayne Decolonization is not a metaphor Moves to Innocence I Settler Nativism pp 10 13 Decolonization Indigeneity Education amp Society 2012 External links Edit Look up pretendian in Wiktionary the free dictionary APTN Investigates Cowboys and Pretendians APTN National News television report featuring many of the examples in this article notably those in film The Convenient Pretendian Canada Land podcast Indigenous Race Shifting Red Flags A Quick Primer for Reporters and Others by Kim TallBear Sisseton Wahpeton Playing Pretendian Code Switch NPR Pretendians and Their Impact on Metis Identity in the Academy University of Saskatchewan panel discussion including Maria Campbell Metis 10 Dec 2021 The Pretendian Problem Indian Country Today video report on pretendians and fake Metis 28 Jan 2021 Raceshifting resource on Eastern Euro Canadians and Euro Americans posting as Indigenous peoples Unsettling Genealogies Conference A Forum on Pseudo Indians Race Shifting Pretendians and Self Indigenization in Media Arts Politics and the Academy Series of 8 panel presentations in Spring 2022 at Michigan State University Unmasking Pseudo Indians Opening Remarks at by George Cornell Ojibwe Ben Barnes Shawnee Kim TallBear Sisseton Wahpeton Mar 21 2022 Teillet Report on Indigenous Identity Fraud October 2022 report for the University of Saskatchewan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pretendian amp oldid 1138314384, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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