Many Nations of Native America
fits into the University of Arizona's
General Education Tier One sequence in
Traditions and Cultures, Non-Western Cultures and Civilizations (TRAD 101). It is taught by faculty and graduate students of the
American Indian Studies (AIS) Program. The website was launched in
January, 1999 and is updated each semester.
All subtitles of TRAD 101 are approved as General
Education Gender, Race, Class, Ethnicity or Non-Western Area Studies.
Instructions
for
accessing online resources.
Directions to computer labs on
campus.
Please note: All section assignments and essays must be turned in to your own TA
during Friday discussions. No emailed assignments or essays will be
accepted.

American
Indian Studies has an approved minor.

Each semester the Many Nations of Native America Course is
organized a little differently, and covers slightly different nations and topics
within our themes. For each nation, we will highlight origin stories,
explanations of how the world came to be, specific historic moments,
contemporary peoples' lives and experiences, and how this Nation's experience
exemplifies the ways in which sovereignty has been defined and constructed.
Spring 2008 Teaching Team
Professors:
Dr. Jay Stauss
Dr. Ben Colombi
Lead T.A.:
Amy Fatzinger, PhD Candidate
Teaching Assistants:
Waylon Begay
Mascha Gemein
Carol Latour
Roland Marmon
Eddie Welch

If you have comments or questions about our website, please contact
Amy
Fatzinger at fatzinge@email.arizona.edu.