“A substantive, fine-grained study with importance for wider dialogues about collaborative indigenizing and decolonizing projects.”—NAIS: Journal of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association“Offers a toolset for archaeologists, anthropologists, and other heritage professionals to think critically about the ways histories are interpreted at heritage sites.”—Historical Archaeology“Hart invites us to consider how the past is referenced in the present-day, and how colonialism has shaped contemporary relationships and has potentially undermining influences in the democratization of heritage. [An] exceedingly well-written and accessible exploration of heritage-scapes and heritage making.”—Museum Anthropology“[Hart’s] call for further collaboration between scholars, museum and heritage-scape professionals, and Native Americans as individuals and communities is relevant, as is her close attention to the problem of representation and the continual influence and power that frustrates the ability of Native Americans to control their heritage stories and landscapes.”—Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History