Indigenous Feminisms Roundtable

被引:24
作者
Aikau, Hokulani K. [1 ]
Arvin, Maile [2 ]
Goeman, Mishuana [3 ]
Morgensen, Scott [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hawaii Manoa, Dept Polit Sci, Native Hawaiian & Indigenous Polit, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA
[2] Univ Calif Riverside, Ethn Studies, Riverside, CA 92521 USA
[3] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Gender Studies Dept, Los Angeles, CA USA
[4] Queens Univ, Dept Gender Studies, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada
关键词
D O I
10.5250/fronjwomestud.36.3.0084
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Daniel Rivers and Karen J. Leong, members of the Transnational Feminisms Summer Institute Program Committee, organized this roundtable to address the absence of Indigenous feminisms from feminist discussions of the transnational, even though many Indigenous nations in the Americas are themselves traversed by settler colonial nation-states, and most American Indians and First Nations peoples are binational, being citizens of sovereign states as well as citizens of settler colonial nation-states. We invited scholars Hokulani K. Aikau (Kanaka. Oiwi Hawai. i) from the University of Hawai. i at Manoa, Maile Arvin (Kanaka Maoli) from UC Riverside, Mishuana Goeman (Tonowanda Band of Seneca) from UCLA, and Scott Morgensen from Queen's University in Kingston to be part of this conversation, with Daniel Rivers as facilitator. Prior to the roundtable, the participants collectively generated questions for discussion: (1) What are the relationships that currently exist between transnational and Indigenous feminisms? Are there overlaps and disjunctures between them, and what can they contribute to one another? (2) Are considerations of Indigeneity frequently erased by transnational concerns, and in what way are these transnational concerns articulated through settler colonialist logics? (3) What convergences exist between Indigenous feminisms and transnational feminisms that can off er critiques of existing heteropatriarchies locally and globally? How might these open up the possibilities of Indigenous transnational alliances that force settler colonialists and nation-states to be responsible for land theft and the injustices that ensue therein?
引用
收藏
页码:84 / 106
页数:23
相关论文
共 45 条
[1]  
Adams Rachel., 2009, CONTINENTAL DIVIDES
[2]   Being indigenous: Resurgences against contemporary colonialism [J].
Alfred, T ;
Corntassel, J .
GOVERNMENT AND OPPOSITION, 2005, 40 (04) :597-614
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2014, The Winter We Danced
[4]  
[Anonymous], 2012, DECOLONIZATION INDIG
[5]  
Arvin Maile., 2013, FEMINIST FORMATIONS, V25, P8, DOI DOI 10.1353/FF.2013.0006
[6]  
Arvin Maile, 2013, FEMINIST FORMATIONS, V25, P11
[7]  
Barker J, 2008, AM QUART, V60, P259
[8]  
Bascara Victor., 2006, Model-Minority Imperialism
[9]  
Blackwell Maylei, 2012, TRANSINDIGENOUS METH
[10]  
Byrd, 2011, TRANSIT EMPIRE INDIG