Cherokee drums / Lloyd Kiva New
Acknowledgements / by Aysen New
Editor's note / by Ryan S. Flahive
Foreword / by Hon. Wilma Mankiller
Preface : "Lloyd Kiva New: the visionary I knew" / by Hon. Stewart Udall
Introduction / by Alfred Young Man, PhD
Family: Mom of many persons ; Farm wife ; Teacher-my first lesson in art ; Storyteller and priestess ; Culturally dispossessed mom ; Father, I called him dad ; Dad's religion ; My brothers Floyd and Claude
The wind shifts: Oklahoma storms ; Storm of storms ; Seasons pass ; A rite of passage ; Sunrise at Timber Hill
Honey Creek: Cherokee ancestors ; Return to Honey Creek ; Honey Creek revisited ; Listen for the drums
Spirituality: Sun worship and the Great Spirit
Identity, prejudice, and search for self: On being Indian ; Identity problems begin ; Irony of it all ; The conquerors and the conquered ; Stradling two cultures ; The drums fade away
Leaving the farm: The Pilgrim story ; My Great Depression ; Josie to the rescue
The grand leap: the Art Institute of Chicago: The epiphany ; Learning to live in my new world
Compulsive arts educator is born: Indian culture and educaton in the mid-1930s ; A new day dawning
Returning home with wartime memories: Scottsdale ; Fate at the crossroads
Lloyd Kiva designs: Learning business the hard way ; Lloyd Kiva is named ; Eleanor Roosevelt's Day ; The Lloyd Kiva enterprise soars
Frank Lloyd Wright, neighbor
The beat of the drums resume
The founding of the Institute of American Indian Arts: IAIA, a program in progress ; Final reflections: Indian culture, Indian arts
The artist as visionary [speech delivered by], Lloyd Kiva New, 1998
Using cultural difference as a basis for creative expression [manuscript by] Lloyd H. New, 1998, Institute of American Indian Arts, Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Santa Fe, New Mexico
A conversation with James A. McGrath [interview] / James A. McGrath with Rose T. Diaz, PhD, 2011 ; edited and annotated by Ryan S. Flahive