Indigenous Literature and Knowledge in Libraries

Wisconsin Water Library > Indigenous Literature and Knowledge in Libraries

At the Wisconsin Water Library, we understand that the active inclusion of Wisconsin’s Indigenous voices in our work is essential to our goal of promoting Great Lakes Literacy. In fact, as libraries exist to serve their communities to the fullest, it is the responsibility of all libraries to both include and listen to the voices of their local Indigenous peoples. It is our hope that the resources below will serve as a productive starting point for any library hoping to fulfill this responsibility.

Happy learning!
Maya Reinfeldt
Community Engaged Intern, Wisconsin Sea Grant
Summer 2022

Indigenous literature

Are you interested in expanding your library’s collection of literature by Indigenous authors and on Indigenous topics? Do you want to ensure that your collection contains only accurate, up-to-date and respectful materials? Explore the following resources and learn where to begin.

*The starred resources are not from the United States, but can still serve as useful guidelines for ethically expanding our collections of Native American literature.

Tribal & Indigenous Librarianship

The following resources introduce tribal libraries and practices of Indigenous librarianship.

 

Indigenous Knowledge in Libraries

Indigenous Knowledge (IK), sometimes called Traditional Knowledge (TK), refers to the invaluable and irreplaceable collections of knowledge, practices and inventions that Indigenous communities around the world hold based on centuries of experience living in a certain environment. Historically, IK has been extracted, oftentimes without consent, from Indigenous groups and misused, misrepresented and stored where said groups cannot access it. Today, preserving IK and emphasizing its legitimacy and relevance is crucial – how can libraries ethically and productively play a role in this process? Look to the resources below for information.

Photo: Wisconsin Sea Grant

Archives & Research

Indigenous peoples across America and the globe have long been the subjects of study, research, museum and archive collections, etc. However, many of these interactions were informed by colonialism, paternalism, violence, and the historicization of Indigenous cultures (regarding them as a part of history, not as a part of the present). Indigenous cultural artifacts were taken from the tribes to whom they belonged to be displayed in museums, and valuable materials such as old videos of elders have been stored in archives to which the tribal members do not have easy access. How can we remedy these wrongs today and work towards a future in which invaluable Indigenous cultural information and materials are collected and stored ethically? The resources below can answer this question.

Q&A with Dr. Phillips

Guidance from Dr. Katrina Phillips, Assistant Professor of History at Macalester College and citizen of the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe

Q: How can non-tribal librarians and informal educators answer questions about tribal nations today?

A: “[Tribal nations] cannot do all of this advocacy work on our own. And if a little kid is like, ‘Wait, Native people are still around today?’ That’s a perfect place for you to jump in and be like, ‘Yes, they are. You know, they live in houses, just like you do. They go to the grocery store, they go to Target…’ because so much of that is still so deeply ingrained, like, this is a thing of the past. I would say answer the questions, you know? And then just be honest, if there’s a question you don’t have the answer to, be like, ‘You know, that’s a great question. I don’t know the answer. But I bet if you talk to your grownups at home, and ask them to look it up, I bet they can help you find the answer.’” – Dr. Katrina Phillips

Q: How can libraries best support Indigenous language revitalization efforts?

A: “The first thing that comes to mind is offering support in whatever will best serve that community. Let’s say somebody wants to start a language table, but they don’t have space for it – my brain always goes right away to tangible things that can happen really fast… like, opening… a side room for the language tables, or publicizing events, working or helping host events, bringing in speakers… I think helping helping facilitate is one thing, and I would also honestly say helping plan things like that, because if the THPO office is drowning in requests for this or that, if libraries have the staff, the resources, the space, to support things like that, and are coming from a place of recognizing the impact that that will have – not like the whole savior kind of narrative – but to be like, ‘Hey, we’ve got a space, if you need room for the language table. Let’s figure it out.’”

Dr. Phillips offers the following

  • Should a library or an archive find itself in possession of Native objects, archival materials, or other information/items of cultural importance, the first step should be to reach out to the tribal nation in question and inform them that you have these objects. Oftentimes, tribal nations have had such cultural artifacts taken from them and today, may not even be aware of their existence.
  • The end goal is always for the Native nation to have easy and high-quality access to or final stewardship of the cultural artifacts. Some potential outcomes include:
    • The tribal nation reclaims their cultural artifact in collaboration with the library/archive
    • The tribal nation reclaims their cultural artifact and gives the library/archive permission to keep a high-quality copy (for example, a digital scan of a document)
    • The tribal nation chooses to leave the original with the library/archive, and opts to receive a high-quality copy themselves
    • The tribal nation leaves the artifact with the library/archive, but the library/archive consistently and reliably collaborates with the tribal nation to ensure they will have easy and permanent access to said artifact
  • We must work to avoid repeating situations like the following: “An archaeologist at Beloit College did a field school or a big study up at Red Cliff in 1979, and was there with permission, the tribe knew he was going to be there. But he took everything back to Beloit with him, and Red Cliff didn’t have access to his findings, to anything he found…”
“So few Native nations are actually the holders of their own histories.” – Dr. Katrina Phillips