Allotment Stories: Indigenous Land Relations under Settler Siege: Indigenous Americas
Editat de Daniel Heath Justice, Jean M. O’Brienen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 mar 2022
More than two dozen stories of Indigenous resistance to the privatization and allotment of Indigenous lands
Land privatization has been a longstanding and ongoing settler colonial process separating Indigenous peoples from their traditional homelands, with devastating consequences. Allotment Stories delves into this conflict, creating a complex conversation out of narratives of Indigenous communities resisting allotment and other dispossessive land schemes.
From the use of homesteading by nineteenth-century Anishinaabe women to maintain their independence to the role that roads have played in expropriating Guam’s Indigenous heritage to the links between land loss and genocide in California, Allotment Stories collects more than two dozen chronicles of white imperialism and Indigenous resistance. Ranging from the historical to the contemporary and grappling with Indigenous land struggles around the globe, these narratives showcase both scholarly and creative forms of expression, constructing a multifaceted book of diverse disciplinary perspectives. Allotment Stories highlights how Indigenous peoples have consistently used creativity to sustain collective ties, kinship relations, and cultural commitments in the face of privatization. At once informing readers while provoking them toward further research into Indigenous resilience, this collection pieces back together some of what the forces of allotment have tried to tear apart.
Contributors: Jennifer Adese, U of Toronto Mississauga; Megan Baker, U of California, Los Angeles; William Bauer Jr., U of Nevada, Las Vegas; Christine Taitano DeLisle, U of Minnesota–Twin Cities; Vicente M. Diaz, U of Minnesota–Twin Cities; Sarah Biscarra Dilley, U of California, Davis; Marilyn Dumont, U of Alberta; Munir Fakher Eldin, Birzeit U, Palestine; Nick Estes, U of New Mexico; Pauliina Feodoroff; Susan E. Gray, Arizona State U; J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, Wesleyan U; Rauna Kuokkanen, U of Lapland and U of Toronto; Sheryl R. Lightfoot, U of British Columbia; Kelly McDonough, U of Texas at Austin; Ruby Hansen Murray; Tero Mustonen, U of Eastern Finland; Darren O’Toole, U of Ottawa; Shiri Pasternak, Ryerson U; Dione Payne, Te Whare Wānaka o Aoraki–Lincoln U; Joseph M. Pierce, Stony Brook U; Khal Schneider, California State U, Sacramento; Argelia Segovia Liga, Colegio de Michoacán; Leanne Betasamosake Simpson; Jameson R. Sweet, Rutgers U; Michael P. Taylor, Brigham Young U; Candessa Tehee, Northeastern State U; Benjamin Hugh Velaise, Google American Indian Network.
Land privatization has been a longstanding and ongoing settler colonial process separating Indigenous peoples from their traditional homelands, with devastating consequences. Allotment Stories delves into this conflict, creating a complex conversation out of narratives of Indigenous communities resisting allotment and other dispossessive land schemes.
From the use of homesteading by nineteenth-century Anishinaabe women to maintain their independence to the role that roads have played in expropriating Guam’s Indigenous heritage to the links between land loss and genocide in California, Allotment Stories collects more than two dozen chronicles of white imperialism and Indigenous resistance. Ranging from the historical to the contemporary and grappling with Indigenous land struggles around the globe, these narratives showcase both scholarly and creative forms of expression, constructing a multifaceted book of diverse disciplinary perspectives. Allotment Stories highlights how Indigenous peoples have consistently used creativity to sustain collective ties, kinship relations, and cultural commitments in the face of privatization. At once informing readers while provoking them toward further research into Indigenous resilience, this collection pieces back together some of what the forces of allotment have tried to tear apart.
Contributors: Jennifer Adese, U of Toronto Mississauga; Megan Baker, U of California, Los Angeles; William Bauer Jr., U of Nevada, Las Vegas; Christine Taitano DeLisle, U of Minnesota–Twin Cities; Vicente M. Diaz, U of Minnesota–Twin Cities; Sarah Biscarra Dilley, U of California, Davis; Marilyn Dumont, U of Alberta; Munir Fakher Eldin, Birzeit U, Palestine; Nick Estes, U of New Mexico; Pauliina Feodoroff; Susan E. Gray, Arizona State U; J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, Wesleyan U; Rauna Kuokkanen, U of Lapland and U of Toronto; Sheryl R. Lightfoot, U of British Columbia; Kelly McDonough, U of Texas at Austin; Ruby Hansen Murray; Tero Mustonen, U of Eastern Finland; Darren O’Toole, U of Ottawa; Shiri Pasternak, Ryerson U; Dione Payne, Te Whare Wānaka o Aoraki–Lincoln U; Joseph M. Pierce, Stony Brook U; Khal Schneider, California State U, Sacramento; Argelia Segovia Liga, Colegio de Michoacán; Leanne Betasamosake Simpson; Jameson R. Sweet, Rutgers U; Michael P. Taylor, Brigham Young U; Candessa Tehee, Northeastern State U; Benjamin Hugh Velaise, Google American Indian Network.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781517908768
ISBN-10: 1517908760
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 26 black & whilte illustrations
Dimensiuni: 178 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: University of Minnesota Press
Colecția Univ Of Minnesota Press
Seria Indigenous Americas
ISBN-10: 1517908760
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 26 black & whilte illustrations
Dimensiuni: 178 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: University of Minnesota Press
Colecția Univ Of Minnesota Press
Seria Indigenous Americas
Notă biografică
Raised in traditional Ute territory in Colorado and now living in shíshálh territory in British Columbia, Daniel Heath Justice (Cherokee Nation) is professor of Critical Indigenous Studies and English at the University of British Columbia, xwməθkwəy̓əm territory. He is author of Why Indigenous Literatures Matter and Our Fire Survives the Storm (Minnesota, 2005).
Jean M. O’Brien (White Earth Ojibwe) is Distinguished McKnight and Northrop Professor in the Department of History at the University of Minnesota within Dakota homelands. Her books include Dispossession by Degrees and Firsting and Lasting (Minnesota, 2010).
Jean M. O’Brien (White Earth Ojibwe) is Distinguished McKnight and Northrop Professor in the Department of History at the University of Minnesota within Dakota homelands. Her books include Dispossession by Degrees and Firsting and Lasting (Minnesota, 2010).
Cuprins
Contents
Introduction: What’s Done to the People Is Done to the Land
Daniel Heath Justice and Jean M. O’Brien
$85 an Acre
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
Part I. Family Narrations of Privatization
tʸiptukɨłhɨ wa tʸiptutʸɨˀnɨ, where are you from and where are you going?: patterns, parcels, and place nitspu tiłhin
Sarah Biscarra Dilley
Narrated Nationhood and Imagined Belonging: Fanciful Family Stories and Kinship Legacies of Allotment
Daniel Heath Justice
Making Mahnomen Home: The Dawes Act and Ojibwe Mobility in Grandma’s Stories
Jean M. O’Brien
The World of Paper, Restoring Relations, and the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe
Nick Estes
“What should we do?”: Returning Fractionated Allotments Back to the Tribes, One Family’s Story
Sheryl Lightfoot
Allotment Speculations: The Emergence of Land Memory
Joseph M. Pierce
Interlude: Kinscape
Marilyn Dumont
Part II. Racial and Gender Taxonomies
Blut und Boden: “Mixed-Bloods” and Métis in U.S. Allotment and Canadian Enfranchisement Policies
Darren O’Toole
Extinguishing the Dead: Colonial Anxieties and Metis Scrip at the Fringe of Focus
Jennifer Adese
Makhoìčhe Khiìpi: A Dakota Family Story of Race, Land, and Dispossession before the Dawes Act
Jameson R. Sweet
Anishnaabe Women and the Struggle for Indigenous Land Rights in Northern Michigan, 1836–1887
Susan E. Gray
ᎪᎩ ᎤᏗᏞᎩ ᏗᏛᎪᏗ ᎾᏂᏪᏍᎬ ᎶᎶ: You can hear locusts in the heat of the summer
Candessa Tehee
Interlude: Amikode
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
Part III. Privatization as State Violence
Itinerant Indigeneities: Navigating Guåhan’s Treacherous Roads Through CHamoru Feminist Pathways
Christine Taitano DeLisle and Vicente M. Diaz
Settler Colonial Purchase: Privatizing Hawaiian Land
J. Kēhaulani Kauanui
The Enduring Confiscation of Indigenous Allotments in the National Interest—Pōkaewhenua 1961–1969
Dione Payne
“Why does a hat need so much land?”
Shiri Pasternak
Stories of American Indian Freedom: The Privatization of American Indian Resources from Allotment to the Present
William Bauer
The Incorporation of Life and Land: The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act
Benjamin Hugh Velaise
Interlude: Long Live Deatnu and the Grand Allotment
Rauna Kuokkanen
Part IV. Resistance and Resurgence
Indigenous and Traditional Rewilding in Finland and Sápmi: Enacting the Rights and Governance of North Karelian ICCAs and Skolt Sámi
Tero Mustonen and Pauliina Feodoroff
Settler Colonial Mexico and Indigenous Primordial Titles
Kelly S. McDonough
“Our Divine Right to Land”: The Struggle against Privatization of Nahua Communal Lands
Argelia Segovia Liga
After Property: The Sakhina Struggle in Late Ottoman and British-ruled Palestine, 1876–1948
Munir Fakher Eldin
How to Get a Home, How to Work, and How to Live
Khal Schneider
Petitioning Allotment: Collectivist Stories of Indigenous Solidarity
Michael Taylor
I do what I do for the language: Land and Choctaw Language and Cultural Revitalization
Megan Baker
Tse Wah Zha Zhi
Ruby Hansen Murray
Afterword: Indigenous Foresight Under Duress and the Modern Applicability of Allotment Agreements
Stacy L. Leeds
Glossary
Contributors
Index
Introduction: What’s Done to the People Is Done to the Land
Daniel Heath Justice and Jean M. O’Brien
$85 an Acre
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
Part I. Family Narrations of Privatization
tʸiptukɨłhɨ wa tʸiptutʸɨˀnɨ, where are you from and where are you going?: patterns, parcels, and place nitspu tiłhin
Sarah Biscarra Dilley
Narrated Nationhood and Imagined Belonging: Fanciful Family Stories and Kinship Legacies of Allotment
Daniel Heath Justice
Making Mahnomen Home: The Dawes Act and Ojibwe Mobility in Grandma’s Stories
Jean M. O’Brien
The World of Paper, Restoring Relations, and the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe
Nick Estes
“What should we do?”: Returning Fractionated Allotments Back to the Tribes, One Family’s Story
Sheryl Lightfoot
Allotment Speculations: The Emergence of Land Memory
Joseph M. Pierce
Interlude: Kinscape
Marilyn Dumont
Part II. Racial and Gender Taxonomies
Blut und Boden: “Mixed-Bloods” and Métis in U.S. Allotment and Canadian Enfranchisement Policies
Darren O’Toole
Extinguishing the Dead: Colonial Anxieties and Metis Scrip at the Fringe of Focus
Jennifer Adese
Makhoìčhe Khiìpi: A Dakota Family Story of Race, Land, and Dispossession before the Dawes Act
Jameson R. Sweet
Anishnaabe Women and the Struggle for Indigenous Land Rights in Northern Michigan, 1836–1887
Susan E. Gray
ᎪᎩ ᎤᏗᏞᎩ ᏗᏛᎪᏗ ᎾᏂᏪᏍᎬ ᎶᎶ: You can hear locusts in the heat of the summer
Candessa Tehee
Interlude: Amikode
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
Part III. Privatization as State Violence
Itinerant Indigeneities: Navigating Guåhan’s Treacherous Roads Through CHamoru Feminist Pathways
Christine Taitano DeLisle and Vicente M. Diaz
Settler Colonial Purchase: Privatizing Hawaiian Land
J. Kēhaulani Kauanui
The Enduring Confiscation of Indigenous Allotments in the National Interest—Pōkaewhenua 1961–1969
Dione Payne
“Why does a hat need so much land?”
Shiri Pasternak
Stories of American Indian Freedom: The Privatization of American Indian Resources from Allotment to the Present
William Bauer
The Incorporation of Life and Land: The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act
Benjamin Hugh Velaise
Interlude: Long Live Deatnu and the Grand Allotment
Rauna Kuokkanen
Part IV. Resistance and Resurgence
Indigenous and Traditional Rewilding in Finland and Sápmi: Enacting the Rights and Governance of North Karelian ICCAs and Skolt Sámi
Tero Mustonen and Pauliina Feodoroff
Settler Colonial Mexico and Indigenous Primordial Titles
Kelly S. McDonough
“Our Divine Right to Land”: The Struggle against Privatization of Nahua Communal Lands
Argelia Segovia Liga
After Property: The Sakhina Struggle in Late Ottoman and British-ruled Palestine, 1876–1948
Munir Fakher Eldin
How to Get a Home, How to Work, and How to Live
Khal Schneider
Petitioning Allotment: Collectivist Stories of Indigenous Solidarity
Michael Taylor
I do what I do for the language: Land and Choctaw Language and Cultural Revitalization
Megan Baker
Tse Wah Zha Zhi
Ruby Hansen Murray
Afterword: Indigenous Foresight Under Duress and the Modern Applicability of Allotment Agreements
Stacy L. Leeds
Glossary
Contributors
Index
Recenzii
"At times devastating and at others deeply hopeful, every essay in the collection carries a weight atypical in scholarly anthologies; readers are made to feel a sense of responsibility and gratitude for the often-personal narratives."—Transmotion