NASX 105D

Fall and Spring semesters: in-person

Summer semester: online

3 credits, undergraduate level-100, Diversity Credit

Fall and Spring Instructor: Dr. Walter Fleming

Summer Instructor: Dr. Matthew Herman

Recitation Instructors: NAS Graduate Teaching Assistants 

Course Description

Introduction to Native American Studies presents a survey of the discipline that emphasizes American Indian outlooks on topics relevant to American Indian concerns - both past and present. Another core function of the course is to provide a basic training in NAS work. Through discipline-specific concepts, frameworks, and methods, students not only learn about Native American Studies, but they learn how to do Native American Studies research. Course meetings feature a mix of lecture, open discussion, guest speakers, small group work, student presentations, film screenings, podcasts, readings, pop quizzes, reviews, and exams.  

Readings for this course may include, but are not limited to:

*Resource and materials list subject to change. Check with the instructor before purchasing books!*

  • Fleming, Walter. (2002). The Complete Idiot's Guide to Native American History. 
  • Erdrich, Louise. (2012). The Round House. 

Instructors

Dr. Walter Fleming

Walter Fleming earned his Ph.D. in American Studies from the University of Kansas.He is an enrolled citizen of the Kickapoo Tribe of Kansas and grew up on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation in southeastern Montana.He has taught history and culture courses for over 40 years and is a specialist in Northern Plains culture and American Indian literature.Outside of a campus context, he is a storyteller and writer of short fiction. His book­‐length publications include two editions of Visions of an Enduring People, a comprehensive anthology of readings in Native American Studies, and The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Native American History.

Dr. Matt Herman

Matthew Herman earned his Ph.D. in English and a certificate in cultural studies from SUNY Stony Brook. He came to MSU from Stone Child Tribal College on the Rocky Boys Reservation in northwest Montana, where he taught in the Liberal Arts Program, and coordinated the Rocky Boy Tribal History Project. He has published in the areas of contemporary Native American literature, American cultural studies, composition pedagogy, and Indigenous political theory.His first book, Politics and Aesthetics in Contemporary Native American Literature: Across Every Border, was published in 2009 by Routledge.

Recitation Instructors

Kaja Anderson MSU Department of Native American Studies MSU Department of Native American Studies Erika Ross

Kaja Anderson, GTA

Recitation sections: 2 & 3

Taylor Pajunen, GTA

Recitation sections: 4 & 5

Sinai Soriano, GTA

Recitation Sections: 6 & 8

Erika Ross, Acadmic Services Coordinator

Recitation Sections: 7 & 9

Tuition and Fees

If you are accepted into a qualified MSU program, see the appropriate MSU Tuition and Fee table below:

For more information, view MSU Fee Schedules

How to Register

You must be accepted as a student to Montana State University to take this course. Learn how to apply.

Students register for courses via MSU's online registration system, MyInfo

Registration requires a PIN number. Learn how to find your PIN.

Once you have your PIN, learn how to register through MyInfo.

 

For course information:

Please contact Erika Ross at erika.ross1@montana.edu or Walter Fleming at wfleming@montana.edu or Matt Herman at mherman@montana.edu.