Becoming Indigenous

£37.79

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Becoming Indigenous

Governing Imaginaries in the Anthropocene

Colonialism and imperialism National liberation and independence Social and political philosophy Politics and government Political structure and processes

Authors: David Chandler, Julian Reid

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Language: English

Published by: Rowman & Littlefield

Published on: 4th October 2019

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 160 pages

ISBN: 9781786605733


Representations of indigenous peoples

While never static, representations of indigenous peoples have always served the interests of settler-colonialism. Historically, the dominant framing marginalised indigenous practices as legacies of the distant past. Today, indigenous approaches are demanded in order for settler-colonialism itself to have a future. Becoming indigenous, we are told, is a necessity if humanity is to survive and cope with the catastrophic changes wrought by modernist excess in the Anthropocene.

Becoming Indigenous

Becoming Indigenous provides an agenda-setting critique, analysing how and why indigeneity has been reduced to instrumental imaginaries of perseverance and resilience. Indigenous ‘alternatives’ are today central to a range of governing discourses, which promise empowerment but are highly disciplinary. Critical theorists often endorse these framings, happy to instrumentalise indigenous peoples as caretakers of the environment or as teaching the moderns about their ‘more-than-human’ responsibilities.

Critique of discourses

Chandler and Reid argue that these discourses have little to do with indigenous struggles or with challenging settler-colonial power. In fact, instrumentalising indigeneity in these ways merely reinforces neoliberal hegemony, marginalising critical alternatives for both indigenous and non-indigenous peoples alike.

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