Melinda Beth Coker Micco (December 21, 1947 – December 5, 2021) was an American filmmaker, scholar, activist, and educator. She was a professor of ethnic studies at Mills College, and the first Native American woman to earn tenure at Mills.
Micco joined the faculty of Mills College in 1993, and became chair of the Ethnic Studies department in 1994. Also in 1994, she was the first Native American woman to earn tenure at Mills College. She taught ethnic studies courses at Mills,[5] and spoke on Native American identity issues nationally.[6][7] She retired from Mills College in 2018.[8][9]
In 2018 Micco spoke at the Global Climate Action Summit in San Francisco.[10] In 2019 she spoke at a Berkeley rally against immigrant detention centers.[11] She was founder of the Brave Hearted Women Conference,[2] and one of the founders of Idle No More SF Bay, an environmental justice project led by indigenous women elders.[12][13][14] She was also active in the Intertribal Friendship House in Oakland, California.[15]
Micco produced the documentaries Killing the 7th Generation: Reproductive Abuses against Indigenous Women, with Diné Navajo educator Esther Lucero, and Every Step A Prayer: Refinery Corridor Healing Walks, with Chihiro Wimbush. She appeared in the Canadian documentary Reel Injun (2006), on film depictions of Native Americans.[16]
Publications
"African Americans and American Indians" (encyclopedia entry, 1996)[17]
"Tribal Re-Creations: Buffalo Child Long Lance and Black Seminole Narratives" (chapter, 2000)[18]
"Seminoles and Black Seminoles in Contemporary Tribal Politics" (symposium contribution, 2000)[19]
“Blood and Money: The Case of Seminole Freedmen and Seminole Indians in Oklahoma” (chapter, 2006)[20][21]
Pretending to be Me: Ethnic Transvestism and Cross-Writing (edited collection, with Joe Lockhard)
Personal life
Micco married and divorced, and had two children. She died in 2021, in Oakland, California, at age 72.[2][21]
^Micco, Melinda. "Seminoles and Black Seminoles in Contemporary Tribal Politics." In Eating Out of the Same Pot: Relating Black and Native Histories" A Cross-cultural Symposium at Dartmouth College April, pp. 20-22. 2000.