Deconstructing the “Apache” Identity: A History of the San Carlos Apachean Peoples

Historians of “Apache” history have continuously told the stories of the Chiricahua Apachean peoples and Goyathlay’s (Geronimo) resistance to the incursion of the U.S. Army. However, the attention afforded to these peoples and the lack of understanding regarding the cultural contingencies of Apachean history, leaves the story incomplete and unfulfilled. Consequently, academics fail to provide two very important and necessary components of the Apachean and Indigenous histories at the San Carlos Reservation. First, that the issue of identity remained a point of contention for the Indigenous peoples consolidated near the San Carlos Agency during the nineteenth century, and second, the history of the Western Apachean peoples, specifically, continues into the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The Apachean peoples of the “San Carlos Apache Tribe,” as they are known in the modern era, experienced a series of events that culminated in the creation of a “San Carlos Apache” identity. This adherence to a manufactured political identity dissuades members from incorporating traditional concepts of identity that, in conjunction with a Westernized tribal government, undermines traditional Apachean identifiers in favor of a colonial designation.

The full dissertation is embargoed until April 2026. 

About the Author

Marcus Macktima (pronounced: Mock-tai-muh) is a member of the San Carlos Apache Tribe in Eastern Arizona, with a lineage to the Hopi people, and resides in Northern Arizona with his wife and five children. Since 2019, Dr. Macktima has taught Apache History at the San Carlos Apache College (SCAC) as a faculty member and continuously serves the SCAC community in various capacities. He received a PhD in history from the University of Oklahoma (OU) in the Spring of 2023 and previously obtained a master’s degree in Native American studies and a bachelor’s degree in history from OU. Much of his work examines the culturally complex issue of identity for the peoples of the San Carlos Reservation, to include an analysis of the peoples’ history post-Reservation establishment. In conjunction with his position at SCAC, Dr. Macktima currently holds a position at Northern Arizona University (NAU) as an assistant professor in history where he teaches courses related to Indigenous histories.

Marcus Macktima was a Mellon Career Enhancement Doctoral Fellow in 2021-23.