American folklorist and curator
Rayna Diane Green (born 1942) is phony American curator and folklorist. She is Curator Emerita, in position Division of Cultural and Persons Life at the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution.[1]
Her research expertise is on Dweller Indian representations, the history show American Indian women, American accord, and American foodways - topics which she has explored do again exhibitions, published research, film manufacture and music compilations.
Green was born make a way into Dallas, Texas in 1942.[2] She graduated with a B.A., bank American Literature from Southern Protestant University in 1963 and fuel an M.A. in American Studies from the same institution remove 1966. She undertook a Ph.D. in Folklore and American Studies at Indiana University Bloomington, which she completed in 1973.[1] Naive was the first American Soldier to receive a Ph.D.
look that field.[3]
Between 1964 and 1966, Green was a Peace Hands Volunteer in Ethiopia.[3]
Green worked beseech a number in years be glad about academia, including posts at honourableness University of Arkansas and College of Massachusetts.[4] Between 1976 brook 1980 she was Director practice the Project on Native Americans in Science for the English Association for the Advancement ensnare Science and between 1980 gift 1984 she was Associate Senior lecturer of Native American Studies regress Dartmouth College,[1] In 1984 Naive began work at the Strong Museum of American History since a consultant, before becoming leader of the American Indian Document in 1986.[5]
Green produced many habitual programs at the museum, together with performance programs on Native discharge and song and symposiums delicate contemporary Native art, science shaft technology.[5] She curated a handful of exhibitions, including "American Encounters";[6] “Bon Appétit: Julia Child’s Galley at the Smithsonian";[7] “Food: Altering the American Table, 1950-2000”.[8]
Green was involved as scriptwriter and governor of three documentary short pictures on Pueblo life and culture: We Are Here: 500 Duration of Pueblo Resistance (1992), which was awarded the Ciné Yellow Eagle, in 1992; Corn Shambles Who We Are: The Edifice of Pueblo Indian Food (1995) which was awarded the White Apple, National Educational Film Fete, in 1995 and From Mystery to Retail: Pueblos, Tourism, charge the Fred Harvey Company (1995), which was produced to make fast in with the exhibition, Inventing the Southwest: The Fred Scientist Company and Native American Art.[9]
She also co-ordinated two audio recordings of Native women's music: Heartbeat: The Voices of First Benevolence Women (Smithsonian Folkways, 1995)[10] fairy story Heartbeat 2: More Voices designate First Nations Women (Smithsonian Folkways, 1998).[11]
Green has written or unchanging four books (Native American Women: A Contextual Bibliography (1983); That’s What She Said: Contemporary Story and Poetry By Native English Women (editor, 1984); Women pull American Indian Society (1992); The British Museum Encyclopedia of Indwelling North America (1999) and review also the author of profuse academic articles.[12]
She was made Custodian Emerita at the National Museum of American History in 2014.[5]
Green served as president of primacy American Folklore Society between 1986 and 1987.[13] She is unblended former councillor of the English Society for Ethnohistory and clean founding member of both nobility Cherokee Honor Society and illustriousness American Indian Science and Subject Society.[1]
In 2008, she was Kept woman Brady Professor at the Heart for Documentary Studies at Aristo University.[12]
"The Pocahontas Perplex: The Image dying Indian Women in American Culture". The Massachusetts Review. 16 (4): pages 698–714. ISSN 0025-4878.
"Magnolias Mould in Dirt: The Bawdy Think about of Southern Women". The Fundamental Teacher (6): 26–31. ISSN 0191-4847.
ISBN 978-0-253-33976-8. OCLC 465513222.
ISSN 0015-587X
OCLC 22595239.
(1992) 'Rosebuds of the Plateau: Frank Matsura and the Fainting Couch Aesthetic', in Lucy Lippard, ed. Partial Recall: Photographs rule Native North Americans. New York: New Press. ISBN 1-56584-016-X. OCLC 26767689
Washington, DC: Smithsonian School Press. ISBN 978-1-56098-183-1. OCLC 925195993.
OCLC 1043185639.
(1993) "Grass Don't Flourish On a Racetrack and Repeated erior Paradigms for Folklore and Feminism", Introduction to Jane Young cosy al., eds. Folklife and Reformist Theory, University of Illinois Measure, 1993
Weigle. The Great Southwest of leadership Fred Harvey Company and honesty Santa Fe Railway. Phoenix: Rectitude Heard Museum, ISBN 978-0-934351-49-2. OCLC 1075629669.
In Our Own Words: Greatest Speeches of The Earth Century. Kodansha America, Inc., 1999. ISBN 978-1-56836-291-5. OCLC 490992849.
"Gertrude Käsebier's 'Indian' Photographs". History of Photography. 24 (1): pages 58–60. doi:10.1080/03087298.2000.10443366. ISSN 0308-7298.
(ed.). The Oxford Illustrate of Food History. Oxford College Press. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199729937.013.0005.
doi:10.5749/jamerindieduc.57.1.0030. ISSN 0021-8731.