Mapping Neshnabé Futurity: Celestial Currents of Sovereignty in Potawatomi Skies, Lands, and Waters: Critical Issues in Indigenous Studies
Autor Blaire Morseauen Paperback – 20 mai 2025
Morseau also challenges the hegemonic narratives of settler futurism found in mainstream science fiction, which often perpetuate colonial fantasies and exclude marginalized voices. By fusing ethnography of tribal nation-building projects and analysis of Indigenous speculative fiction, Morseau provides a path to Indigenous futurisms and its role in imagining decolonization. Morseau’s analysis underscores the potency of Indigenous knowledge systems and ceremonial practices in imagining and actualizing alternative futures.
Mapping Neshnabé Futurity is an essential read for scholars and activists alike, urging a rethinking of how we conceive of futurity and sovereignty. This work shows how counter-mapping projects both on the ground and in the skies reclaim space in the Great Lakes region—Neshnabé homelands—and are part of larger constellations of Indigenous futurities and stories of survivance.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780816553136
ISBN-10: 0816553130
Pagini: 224
Ilustrații: 8 b&w illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Arizona Press
Colecția University of Arizona Press
Seria Critical Issues in Indigenous Studies
ISBN-10: 0816553130
Pagini: 224
Ilustrații: 8 b&w illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Arizona Press
Colecția University of Arizona Press
Seria Critical Issues in Indigenous Studies
Notă biografică
Blaire Morseau is a citizen of the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians and an assistant professor of religious studies at Michigan State University. Her research interests include Indigenous science fiction, traditional knowledge, and Native counter-mapping.
Recenzii
"Blaire Morseau presents a fresh and exciting view of Indigenous kinship and relationships to land/environment in her book. Drawing on her own community-based knowledge, Morseau shows that Indigenous knowledge has the capability of creating desirable futures for Indigenous communities going forward. A must-read."—Deondre Smiles, author of Decolonized Afterlife: Towards A New Understanding of the Spatial Politics Surrounding Indigenous Death
"Blaire Morseau’s Mapping Neshnabé Futurity argues the everyday lived activities of Potawatomi peoples enables futures on their own terms, and tackles the idea of landscapes of possibility through nation-building projects. This book is necessary for classroom use and anyone interested in Indigenous futurisms as they disrupt and upend settler colonialism."—Natasha Myhal, Ohio State University
"A deeply necessary project that grounds our hope for futurity in our present relations and foregrounds the importance of Indigenous relationships to land and water situated in embodied practices and ceremonial praxis."—Renata Ryan Burchfield, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
"Blaire Morseau’s Mapping Neshnabé Futurity argues the everyday lived activities of Potawatomi peoples enables futures on their own terms, and tackles the idea of landscapes of possibility through nation-building projects. This book is necessary for classroom use and anyone interested in Indigenous futurisms as they disrupt and upend settler colonialism."—Natasha Myhal, Ohio State University
"A deeply necessary project that grounds our hope for futurity in our present relations and foregrounds the importance of Indigenous relationships to land and water situated in embodied practices and ceremonial praxis."—Renata Ryan Burchfield, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Descriere
Mapping Neshnabé Futurity is an essential read that offers a rethinking of how we conceive of futurity and sovereignty. Morseau’s interdisciplinary approach, blending anthropological research with literary critique, shows how counter-mapping projects both on the ground and in the skies reclaim space in the Great Lakes region—Neshnabé homelands—and are part of Anishinaabé/Neshnabé communities’ constellations of Indigenous futurities and stories of survivance.