Wado Barnaby,
I've forwarded the excellent article to my writer daughter at Emerson College. She has been dealing with some of these same issues in her children's lit course. This should be most helpful. I know some of the people mentioned and Singer is generally accurate about the one's I know. Bruchac for example is of such a good nature that it is normal that his tales would have his personality as a Master Storyteller for children.
We have to deal with what will be published. Sometime ago I was asked to author a chapter on native pedagogy for a book but what I presented was so different from their own projection of what a book should be that they backed out. The same thing has happened several times so I have removed myself from institutions and do my own work privately. Much more free to explore and go where ever the art takes one. I would add that it is this attitude that has brought students from many traditions to study voice with me. I don't seek to convince them but instead simply help them develop what is from their own culture and genius. To first accept, then love, then clean, then recognize, then develop, then give and finally heal their art.
I give credit to Ralph Kirkpatrick and the early music people for this attitude since I had the honor of being in on the founding of that important modern movement in musicology.
This article is an advance on this list. I hope there will be a discussion of it.
donada gohv'i
Ray Evans Harrell