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The Routledge Handbook of Critical Indigenous Studies is the first
comprehensive overview of the rapidly expanding field of Indigenous
scholarship. The book is ambitious in scope, ranging across
disciplines and national boundaries, with particular reference to
the lived conditions of Indigenous peoples in the first world. The
contributors are all themselves Indigenous scholars who provide
critical understandings of indigeneity in relation to ontology
(ways of being), epistemology (ways of knowing), and axiology (ways
of doing) with a view to providing insights into how Indigenous
peoples and communities engage and examine the worlds in which they
are immersed. Sections include: * Indigenous Sovereignty *
Indigeneity in the 21st Century * Indigenous Epistemologies * The
Field of Indigenous Studies * Global Indigeneity This handbook
contributes to the re-centring of Indigenous knowledges, providing
material and ideational analyses of social, political, and cultural
institutions and critiquing and considering how Indigenous peoples
situate themselves within, outside, and in relation to dominant
discourses, dominant postcolonial cultures and prevailing Western
thought. This book will be of interest to scholars with an interest
in Indigenous peoples across Literature, History, Sociology,
Critical Geographies, Philosophy, Cultural Studies, Postcolonial
Studies, Native Studies, Maori Studies, Hawaiian Studies, Native
American Studies, Indigenous Studies, Race Studies, Queer Studies,
Politics, Law, and Feminism.
Indigenous rights in Australia are at a crossroads. Over the past
decade, neo-liberal governments have reasserted their claim to land
in Australia, and refuse to either negotiate with the Indigenous
owners or to make amends for the damage done by dispossession. Many
Indigenous communities are in a parlous state, under threat both
physically and culturally. In Sovereign Subjects some of Indigenous
Australia's emerging and well-known critical thinkers examine the
implications for Indigenous people of continuing to live in a state
founded on invasion. They show how for Indigenous people,
self-determination, welfare dependency, representation, cultural
maintenance, history writing, reconciliation, land ownership and
justice are all inextricably linked to the original act of
dispossession by white settlers and the ongoing loss of
sovereignty. At a time when the old left political agenda has run
its course, and the new right is looking increasingly morally
bankrupt, Sovereign Subjects sets a new rights agenda for
Indigenous politics and Indigenous studies.
The Routledge Handbook of Critical Indigenous Studies is the first
comprehensive overview of the rapidly expanding field of Indigenous
scholarship. The book is ambitious in scope, ranging across
disciplines and national boundaries, with particular reference to
the lived conditions of Indigenous peoples in the first world. The
contributors are all themselves Indigenous scholars who provide
critical understandings of indigeneity in relation to ontology
(ways of being), epistemology (ways of knowing), and axiology (ways
of doing) with a view to providing insights into how Indigenous
peoples and communities engage and examine the worlds in which they
are immersed. Sections include: * Indigenous Sovereignty *
Indigeneity in the 21st Century * Indigenous Epistemologies * The
Field of Indigenous Studies * Global Indigeneity This handbook
contributes to the re-centring of Indigenous knowledges, providing
material and ideational analyses of social, political, and cultural
institutions and critiquing and considering how Indigenous peoples
situate themselves within, outside, and in relation to dominant
discourses, dominant postcolonial cultures and prevailing Western
thought. This book will be of interest to scholars with an interest
in Indigenous peoples across Literature, History, Sociology,
Critical Geographies, Philosophy, Cultural Studies, Postcolonial
Studies, Native Studies, Maori Studies, Hawaiian Studies, Native
American Studies, Indigenous Studies, Race Studies, Queer Studies,
Politics, Law, and Feminism.
The collection contributes to transnational whiteness debates
through theoretically informed readings of historical and
contemporary texts by established and emerging scholars in the
field of critical whiteness studies. From a wide range of
disciplinary perspectives, the book traces continuity and change in
the cultural production of white virtue within texts, from the
proud colonial moment through to neoliberalism and the global war
on terror in the twenty-first century. Read together, these
chapters convey a complex understanding of how transnational
whiteness travels and manifests itself within different political
and cultural contexts. Some chapters address political, legal and
constitutional aspects of whiteness while others explore media
representations and popular cultural texts and practices. The book
also contains valuable historical studies documenting how whiteness
is insinuated within the texts produced, circulated and reproduced
in specific cultural and national locations.
Indigenous rights in Australia are at a crossroads. Over the past
decade, neo-liberal governments have reasserted their claim to land
in Australia, and refuse to either negotiate with the Indigenous
owners or to make amends for the damage done by dispossession. Many
Indigenous communities are in a parlous state, under threat both
physically and culturally.In Sovereign Subjects some of Indigenous
Australia's emerging and well-known critical thinkers examine the
implications for Indigenous people of continuing to live in a state
founded on invasion. They show how for Indigenous people,
self-determination, welfare dependency, representation, cultural
maintenance, history writing, reconciliation, land ownership and
justice are all inextricably linked to the original act of
dispossession by white settlers and the ongoing loss of
sovereignty.At a time when the old left political agenda has run
its course, and the new right is looking increasingly morally
bankrupt, Sovereign Subjects sets a new rights agenda for
Indigenous politics and Indigenous studies.
The White Possessive explores the links between race, sovereignty,
and possession through themes of property: owning property, being
property, and becoming propertyless. Focusing on the Australian
Aboriginal context, Aileen Moreton-Robinson questions current race
theory in the first world and its preoccupation with foregrounding
slavery and migration. The nation, she argues, is socially and
culturally constructed as a white possession. Moreton-Robinson
reveals how the core values of Australian national identity
continue to have their roots in Britishness and colonization, built
on the disavowal of Indigenous sovereignty. Whiteness studies
literature is central to Moreton-Robinson's reasoning, and she
shows how blackness works as a white epistemological tool that
bolsters the social production of whiteness-displacing Indigenous
sovereignties and rendering them invisible in a civil rights
discourse, thereby sidestepping thorny issues of settler
colonialism. Throughout this critical examination Moreton-Robinson
proposes a bold new agenda for critical Indigenous studies, one
that involves deeper analysis of how the prerogatives of white
possession function within the role of disciplines.
"Whitening Race" comes to fruition at a time in world history and
global politics when questions about race require critical
investigation and engagement. Since the 1990s, international
scholars have developed a powerful cultural critique by making
whiteness an analytical object of research. Whiteness has become
the invisible norm against which other races are judged in the
construction of identity, representation, subjectivity, nationalism
and the law.With its focus on Australia, the book engages with
relations between migration, Indigenous dispossession and
whiteness. It creates a new intellectual space that investigates
the nature of racialised conditions and their role in reproducing
colonising relations in Australia. Aileen Moreton-Robinson has
brought together scholars from a range of disciplines: philosophy,
cultural and gender studies, education, social work, sociology and
literary studies. All engage critically with the location of the
social and discursive construction of whiteness.
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