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Katrina Phillips

Associate Professor
Native history and the history of the American West

Old Main 301
651-696-6098

Katrina Phillips is an Associate Professor of History with a focus on Native history and the history of the American West. Born and raised in northern Wisconsin, Professor Phillips is a proud citizen of the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe. She earned a BA and PhD in History from the University of Minnesota and spent two years on campus as a Consortium for Faculty Diversity fellow before joining the ranks of the Macalester faculty in 2016.

In her first book,听 (which won the Book Awards 2021 George Freedley Memorial Award for an exemplary work in the field of live performance), Professor Phillips centers what she calls 鈥渟alvage tourism,鈥 a phenomenon that draws from both salvage anthropology and heritage tourism in order to understand the ways in which communities across the United States have capitalized on the histories of Native nations in the creation of tourism enterprises.

Her current book project,听鈥渢he land is the only thing鈥: Activism, Environmentalism, and Tourism in Northern Wisconsin, focuses on approximately a century鈥檚-worth of Red Cliff history, from the Apostle Islands Indian Pageant of the 1920s and the battle over the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore to the creation of the Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission, Native American Tourism of Wisconsin, and Frog Bay Tribal National Park.

In addition to her academic work, Professor Phillips is also a public historian. Her work has appeared in the 鈥淢ade By History鈥 section of the听Washington Post; she鈥檚 appeared on听Native America Calling, NPR鈥檚听1A, and听Indigeneity Rising; and she鈥檚 been quoted in听, the听, and听.听

She鈥檚 written several children鈥檚 books, including ,听,听and听. She鈥檚 also served as a historical and cultural consultant for books like听听and听. In addition to her work with children鈥檚 books, she revised the 鈥淚ndigenous People鈥檚 History鈥 module for Capstone鈥檚 PebbleGo Next in 2023.

At Macalester, Professor Phillips鈥檚 annual courses include Native History to 1871, Native History since 1871, and Imagining the American West. She鈥檚 also taught courses such as Native Minnesota, Native American Activism, and Native Americans in Popular Culture.

Selected Publications and Appearances

  • 鈥淲hen Grandma went to Washington: Ojibwe Activism and the Battle Over the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore鈥 (Native American and Indigenous Studies, Vol. 8, No. 2, Fall 2021).
  • 鈥淟ongtime police brutality drove American Indians to join the George Floyd protests,鈥澨Washington Post,听鈥.鈥
  • 鈥淚t鈥檚 time to remember the forgotten Americans who helped elect Joe Biden,鈥澨Washington Post,听鈥.鈥
  • 鈥淲hy Indigenous Place Names Matter,鈥.
  • 听鈥溾榃here The Waters Reflect The Clouds鈥: Examining Minnesota鈥檚 Indigenous History,鈥.
  • 听鈥溾榃here Two Waters Come Together鈥: The Confluence of Black and Indigenous History at Bdote,鈥, Smithsonian Institution National Museum of American History.
  • 鈥9 Women From American History You Should Know, According to Historians,鈥.
  • 鈥淗istories of Indigenous Sovereignty in Action: What is it and Why Does it Matter?鈥 with Christine DeLucia, Doug Kiel, and Kiara M. Vigil,, Organization of American Historians.
  • 鈥淔orging a new Oregon Trail,鈥.
  • 鈥淭reaty Rights of the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe,鈥.
  • 听鈥,鈥澨BBC.