ABSTRACT
In 1864, the same year the University of Denver was founded by John Evans, then the territorial governor of Colorado and the superintendent of Indian affairs, a group of U.S. militia attacked and killed vulnerable members of the Cheyenne and Arapaho nations at Sand Creek. Using critical race theory and the feminist “ethic of care,” we critique our collections in terms of the massacre and absent Native American voices in order to develop a collecting philosophy and direction to acknowledge and address the gaps and to formulate strategies for teaching students to interrogate a predominately white institutional archive to give voice to the absent or silenced.
Notes
1. Paul E. Bushnell. The Black Women in the Middle West Project: A Comprehensive Resource Guide, Illinois and Indiana. Vol. 81 (Illinois State Historical Society 1988), 152.