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University of California Press

About the Book

Native Lands analyzes the role of visual and literary culture in contemporary Indigenous campaigns for territorial rights. In the post-1960s era, Indigenous artists and writers have created works that align with the goals and strategies of new Native land-based movements. These works represent Native histories and epistemologies in ways that complement activist endeavors, while also probing the limits of these political projects, especially with regard to gender. The social marginalization of Native women was integral to dispossession. And yet its enduring consequences have remained largely neglected, even in Native organizing, as a pressing concern associated with the status of Indigenous people in settler nation-states. The cultural works discussed in this book provide an urgent Indigenous feminist rethinking of Native politics that exposes the innate gendered dimensions of ongoing settler colonialism. They insist that Indigenous campaigns for territorial rights must entail gender justice for Native women.

About the Author

Shari M. Huhndorf is Class of 1938 Professor of Native American Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. Her previous books include Going Native: Indians in the American Cultural Imagination and Mapping the Americas: The Transnational Politics of Contemporary Native Culture.

Table of Contents

Contents

List of Illustrations 
Acknowledgments 
Note on Terminology 

Introduction: Native Lands 

1 • Bodies of Land: Culture and Gender in Indigenous Dispossession 
2 • “Mapping by Words”: Cartography in Tracks and Solar Storms 
3 • Scenes from the Fringe: Gendered Violence and the Geographies of Indigenous Feminism 
4 • Contested Landscapes: Kent Monkman, Zacharias Kunuk, and the Art of Indigenous History 
Conclusion: Bodies of Land, Redux 

Notes 
Works Cited 
Index 

Reviews

"Native Lands brings a much-needed cultural approach to Indigenous territorial studies. Demonstrating a confident cross-disciplinary methodology, Shari M. Huhndorf deftly weaves together literary and visual studies in a series of interlocking analyses of individual works. The readings are theoretically informed, lively, and clear."—Shamoon Zamir, author of The Gift of the Face
 
"Native Lands represents a superb contribution to Indigenous visual and literary studies. Examining the fraught relationship between Indigenous culture and settler colonialism, Huhndorf deploys iconographic imagery associated with European Indigenous dispossession to show how Indigenous artists Kent Monkman, Rebecca Belmore, Erica Lord, and Heather Campbell contest the gendered dimensions of Indigenous loss. Its catalog of images makes this book essential reading for scholars interested in exploring how visual culture intersects with law, literature, and film, and the accompanying rich analysis discloses the cultural-colonial axis of representation through which visual culture participates in alternative forms of Indigenous cultural expression. Native Lands represents an elegant, insightful, and ambitious contribution to Indigenous interdisciplinary studies."—Cheryl Suzack, author of Indigenous Women's Writing and the Cultural Study of Law
 
"Huhndorf's deeply informed Native Lands mounts a compellingly original take on settler colonialism from the perspective of gender, specifically the settler state's reorganization and weaponization of gender roles in Indigenous societies in order to facilitate the genocidal land grabs that constitute the United States and Canada. Central to this weaponization, Huhndorf demonstrates, was and is the transformation of extended kinship culture, in which Native women played a central productive role, into capitalist patriarchy, which marginalized them. Huhndorf makes her argument through acute readings of Native cultural interventions in the form of literature, photography, paintings, and film, interventions that are forms of resistance to an ongoing genocide. Native Lands is essential reading in the critical canon of American studies."—Eric Cheyfitz, author of The Disinformation Age: The Collapse of Liberal Democracy in the United States
 
"This is the book I have been waiting for. The ubiquitous use of #LandBack and #MMIW in popular culture has all but stripped them of their context, complexity, and possibility to effect meaningful change. Huhndorf's complex analysis of a 'new archive' of Indigenous art and literature demonstrates that Indigenous land-based movements are not and cannot be separated from women's bodies and gender justice. She skillfully restores meaning, offers keen new insights, and powerfully raises the stakes of our discussion and our actions."—Amanda Cobb-Greetham, author of Listening to Our Grandmothers' Stories