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Esta sección no se encuentra completamente traducida al español.

 George Burdeau
1995 Fellow–MT
Babb, MT
Backbone to the World: The Blackfeet (1997)
The filmmaker journeys home to Montana to witness his tribe’s struggle to heal and forge a new identity.
Web Sites:
Selected Works
Cine
Who Owns the Past (1999)
Stories Told in the Dark (1999)
Backbone to the World: The Blackfeet (1997)
The Native Americans/The Plains: Part 1 and 2 (1996)
Storytellers of the Pacific (1994)
The Pueblo People (1991)
Accomplishments
George Burdeau, a member of the Blackfeet Nation, has been a director and producer for more than 30 years. He received an Emmy Award for The Native Americans and a Peabody Award for Surviving Columbus. He is the founding dean of the Communications Department of the Institute of American Indian Arts and former director of the National Center for the Production of Native Images, both in Santa Fe, NM. Burdeau was the first Native American director in the Director’s Guild of America. He served as Chairman of the Indian Arts and Crafts Board, board member of the Institute for the Preservation of the Original Languages of Americas, Board chair of the Institute of Native Culture and Communication, and founding board member of the Native American Public Broadcasting Consortium.
News
July, August, September 2007
George Burdeau’s Backbone of the World: The Blackfeet was screened daily at the National Museum of the American Indian throughout July. In this documentary, Burdeau returns home to his tribe and organizes a community filmmaking workshop, focusing on the significance of history and land for today's Blackfeet tribal members.
July 2001
George Burdeau's Backbone of the World: The Blackfeet, a documentary about the Blackfeet tribe's struggle to heal and forge a new identity in the 21st century, screened as part of the ITVS series.