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Mapping the Americas - The Transnational Politics of Contemporary Native Culture (Paperback)
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Mapping the Americas - The Transnational Politics of Contemporary Native Culture (Paperback)
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In Mapping the Americas, Shari M. Huhndorf tracks changing
conceptions of Native culture as it increasingly transcends
national boundaries and takes up vital concerns such as patriarchy,
labor and environmental exploitation, the emergence of pan-Native
urban communities, global imperialism, and the commodification of
indigenous cultures.While nationalism remains a dominant
anticolonial strategy in indigenous contexts, Huhndorf examines the
ways in which transnational indigenous politics have reshaped
Native culture (especially novels, films, photography, and
performance) in the United States and Canada since the 1980s.
Mapping the Americas thus broadens the political paradigms that
have dominated recent critical work in Native studies as well as
the geographies that provide its focus, particularly through its
engagement with the Arctic.Among the manifestations of these new
tendencies in Native culture that Huhndorf presents are Igloolik
Isuma Productions, the Inuit company that has produced nearly forty
films, including Atanarjuat, The Fast Runner; indigenous feminist
playwrights; Leslie Marmon Silko's Almanac of the Dead; and the
multimedia artist Shelley Niro. Huhndorf also addresses the neglect
of Native America by champions of "postnationalist" American
studies, which shifts attention away from ongoing colonial
relationships between the United States and indigenous communities
within its borders to U.S. imperial relations overseas.This is a
dangerous oversight, Huhndorf argues, because this neglect risks
repeating the disavowal of imperialism that the new American
studies takes to task. Parallel transnational tendencies in
American studies and Native American studies have thus worked at
cross-purposes: as pan-tribal alliances draw attention to U.S.
internal colonialism and its connections to global imperialism,
American studies deflects attention from these ongoing processes of
conquest. Mapping the Americas addresses this neglect by
considering what happens to American studies when you put Native
studies at the center.
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