Remediating Cartographies of Erasure: Anthropology, Indigenous Epistemologies, and the Global Imaginary
Editat de Bernard C. Perleyen Limba Engleză Hardback – aug 2025
Indigenous scholars from New Zealand, the United States, and Canada and non-Indigenous scholars from Australia, the United States, and Canada each provide concrete examples of how researchers actualize the moral imperative to work with Indigenous peoples in ways that foster their human rights and self-determination. The contributors discuss anthropological work done in Canada, the United States, Brazil, Peru, Bolivia, Honduras, Australia, Sardinia, and New Zealand.
In laying out a world anthropology, this volume demonstrates the rectification practices of Indigenous peoples and continues anthropology’s long-standing advocacy for social justice and human rights around the globe.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781496243409
ISBN-10: 1496243404
Pagini: 274
Ilustrații: 19 photographs, 1 illustration, 8 maps, 4 graphs, index
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Editura: Nebraska
Colecția University of Nebraska Press
Locul publicării:United States
ISBN-10: 1496243404
Pagini: 274
Ilustrații: 19 photographs, 1 illustration, 8 maps, 4 graphs, index
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Editura: Nebraska
Colecția University of Nebraska Press
Locul publicării:United States
Notă biografică
Bernard C. Perley (Tobique Maliseet) is a professor and the director of the Institute for Critical Indigenous Studies at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver. He is the author of Defying Maliseet Language Death: Emergent Vitalities of Language, Culture, and Identity in Eastern Canada (Nebraska, 2011) and a coeditor of Anthropological Theory for the Twenty-First Century: A Critical Approach and Language and Social Justice: Global Perspectives.
Cuprins
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Remediating Cartographies of Erasure
Part 1. New Zealand
1. Māori and the Crown: Obstructing Indigenous Identity in Aotearoa–New Zealand
Part 2. Australia
2. Belonging in the Country: The Mythic Landscape of Australian Monoculturalism
Part 3. Europe
4. Trickster Gastronomy: Eating the Earth and Resisting Dispossession on a Mediterranean Island
5. “There Is Nothing to Celebrate”: Communal Land Titling and the Paradoxes of Indigenous Rights for Honduran Garifuna
Part 5. North America
6. The Semiotic Reemergence of Cherokee Country
Part 6. South America
8. Thematic Maps as a Strategy of Landscape Reinscription: The Alto Perené Ashéninka Remediation Project
Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Remediating Cartographies of Erasure
Bernard C. Perley
Part 1. New Zealand
1. Māori and the Crown: Obstructing Indigenous Identity in Aotearoa–New Zealand
Marama Muru-Lanning
Part 2. Australia
2. Belonging in the Country: The Mythic Landscape of Australian Monoculturalism
Patrick Sullivan
3. Remaking the World: A Partial Account of Warlpiri Meditations of Place under Settler-Colonial RuleMelinda Hinkson
Part 3. Europe
4. Trickster Gastronomy: Eating the Earth and Resisting Dispossession on a Mediterranean Island
Tracey Heatherington
Part 4. Central America5. “There Is Nothing to Celebrate”: Communal Land Titling and the Paradoxes of Indigenous Rights for Honduran Garifuna
Keri Vacanti Brondo
Part 5. North America
6. The Semiotic Reemergence of Cherokee Country
Margaret Bender, Thomas N. Belt, and Hartwell Francis
7. Bordering on the Absurd: Colonial Cartographies, Maliseet Identities, and Phenomenal StatesBernard C. Perley
Part 6. South America
8. Thematic Maps as a Strategy of Landscape Reinscription: The Alto Perené Ashéninka Remediation Project
Elena Mihas
9. Bolivia’s Gas Boom and the Guarani: Remediation and Erasure during the Government of Evo MoralesBret Gustafson
10. Mebengokre Kayapo Mapping as Graphic Oratory: Cartography as Historical and Ecological Basis of Territorial ClaimsTerence Turner
Contributors
Index
Recenzii
“The scholars featured in this volume represent an excellent cross section of engaged and engaging thinkers. . . . Bold and insightful, one of the book’s main contributions is the challenge it sets readers to look again at what it is they thought they knew through a new lens of inquiry. In this spirit, it will be of wide interest to human geographers as well as anthropologists and Indigenous studies scholars.”—Mark K. Watson, author of Japan’s Ainu Minority in Tokyo: Diasporic Indigeneity and Urban Politics
Descriere
Remediating Cartographies of Erasure is a collaborative volume by leading sociocultural and linguistic anthropologists from Oceania, Africa, Europe, and the Americas that explores the moral imperatives of anthropology to assist Indigenous peoples in attaining self-determination and equality.