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In present-day Japan Ainu women create spaces of cultural
vitalization in which they can move between ""being Ainu"" through
their natal and affinal relationships and actively ""becoming
Ainu"" through their craftwork. They craft these spaces despite the
specter of loss that haunts the efforts of former colonial
subjects, like Ainu, to reconnect with their pasts. The author
synthesizes ethnographic field research, museum and archival
research, and participation in cultural-revival and rights-based
organizing to show how women craft Ainu and indigenous identities
through clothwork and how they also fashion lived connections to
ancestral values and lifestyles. She examines the connections
between the transnational dialogue on global indigeneity and
multiculturalism, material culture, and the social construction of
gender and ethnicity in Japanese society, and she proposes new
directions for the study of settler colonialism and indigenous
mobilization in other Asian and Pacific nations.
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Paperback
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R375
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Discovery Miles 3 470
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