Beth Piatote’s ‘Antikoni’ finds parallels between today’s Native American cultural concerns and ancient Greek theater
Hillsboro’s Native Performing Arts Network and Bag&Baggage Productions stage the erstwhile Oregon writer’s Indigenized adaptation of ‘Antigone.’
Beth Piatote was furious. In summer 1996, the Eugene journalist had just learned about the discovery of the nearly 9,000-year-old bones of a man from the shores of the Columbia River near Kennewick, Washington. Scientists wanted to study the bones of what they called Kennewick Man, claiming he wasn’t Native American. Members of the Columbia River Tribes, who’d inhabited the area for ten millennia or more, claimed the Ancient One as one of their own, and demanded that his bones be released to them for culturally appropriate reburial, as their spiritual practices demanded.
The discovery set off a battle “between people who say the remains have so much to tell us about the ancient human past that they should remain available for research,” wrote Kevin Taylor in Indian Country, “versus people who feel a kinship with the ancient bones and say they should be reburied to show proper reverence for the dead.”










