Description

Book Synopsis

Responding to the recent indigenous turn in American studies, the essays in this volume inform discussion about indigeneity, race, gender, modernity, nation, state power, and globalization in interdisciplinary and broadly comparative global ways.

Organized into three thematic sectionsSpaces of the Pacific, Unexpected Indigenous Modernity, and Nation and Nation-StateAlternative Contact reveals how Native American studies and empowerment movements in the 1960s and 1970s decentered paradigms of Native AmericanEuropean first contact. Among other kinds of contact, the contributors also imagine alternative connections between indigenous and American studies.

The subject of United States military and government hegemony has long overshadowed discussions of contact with peoples of other origins. The articles in this volume explore transnational and cross-ethnic exchanges among indigenous peoples of the Americas, including the Caribbean and Pacific Islands. Such moments o

Trade Review
[Alternative Contact] provides a refreshingly new approach to previous scholarship while it simultaneously offers scholars solid, well-researched analyses for further exploration of the transnational perspective. -- Susan Savage Lee American Indian Quarterly

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
Part I: Spaces of the Pacific
Chapter 1. Attacking Trust: Hawai'i as a Crossroads and Kamehameha Schools in the Crosshairs
Chapter 2. Kēwaikaliko's Benocide: Reversing the Imperial Gaze of Rice v. Cayetano and its Legal Progeny
Chapter 3. Indigeneity in the Diaspora: The Case of Native Hawaiians at Iosepa, Utah
Chapter 4. Bridging Indigenous and Immigrant Struggles: A Case Study of American Sāmoa
Chapter 5. Experimental Encounters: Filipino and Hawaiian Bodies in the U.S. Imperial Invention of Odontoclasia, 1928–1946
Chapter 6. Los Indios Bravos: The Filipino/American Lyric and the Cosmopoetics of Comparative Indigeneity
Part II: "Unexpected" Indigenous Modernity
Chapter 7. Decolonization in Unexpected Places: Native Evangelicalism and the Rearticulation of Mission
Chapter 8. Transnational Indigenous Exchange: Rethinking Global Interactions of Indigenous Peoples at the 1904 St. Louis Exposition
Chapter 9. "Sioux Yells" in the Dawes Era: Lakota "Indian Play," the Wild West, and the Literatures of Luther Standing Bear
Chapter 10. Mexican Indigenismo, Choctaw Self-Determination, and Todd Downing's Detective Novels
Chapter 11. Maori Cowboys, Maori Indians
Chapter 12. A Dying West? Reimagining the Frontier in Frank Matsura's Photography, 1903–1913
Part III: Nation and Nation-State
Chapter 13. Between Dangerous Extremes: Victimization, Ultranationalism, and Identity Performance in Gerald Vizenor's Hiroshima Bugi: Atomu 57
Chapter 14. Toward a U.S.-China Comparative Critique: Indigenous Rights and National Expansion in Alex Kuo's Panda Diaries
Chapter 15. "Sowing Death in Our Women's Wombs": Modernization and Indigenous Nationalism in the 1960s Peace Corps and Jorge Sanjinés' Yawar Mallku
Contributors
Index

Alternative Contact

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    A Paperback / softback by Paul Lai, Lindsey Claire Smith

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      Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
      Publication Date: 26/06/2011
      ISBN13: 9781421400600, 978-1421400600
      ISBN10: 142140060X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Responding to the recent indigenous turn in American studies, the essays in this volume inform discussion about indigeneity, race, gender, modernity, nation, state power, and globalization in interdisciplinary and broadly comparative global ways.

      Organized into three thematic sectionsSpaces of the Pacific, Unexpected Indigenous Modernity, and Nation and Nation-StateAlternative Contact reveals how Native American studies and empowerment movements in the 1960s and 1970s decentered paradigms of Native AmericanEuropean first contact. Among other kinds of contact, the contributors also imagine alternative connections between indigenous and American studies.

      The subject of United States military and government hegemony has long overshadowed discussions of contact with peoples of other origins. The articles in this volume explore transnational and cross-ethnic exchanges among indigenous peoples of the Americas, including the Caribbean and Pacific Islands. Such moments o

      Trade Review
      [Alternative Contact] provides a refreshingly new approach to previous scholarship while it simultaneously offers scholars solid, well-researched analyses for further exploration of the transnational perspective. -- Susan Savage Lee American Indian Quarterly

      Table of Contents

      Preface
      Introduction
      Part I: Spaces of the Pacific
      Chapter 1. Attacking Trust: Hawai'i as a Crossroads and Kamehameha Schools in the Crosshairs
      Chapter 2. Kēwaikaliko's Benocide: Reversing the Imperial Gaze of Rice v. Cayetano and its Legal Progeny
      Chapter 3. Indigeneity in the Diaspora: The Case of Native Hawaiians at Iosepa, Utah
      Chapter 4. Bridging Indigenous and Immigrant Struggles: A Case Study of American Sāmoa
      Chapter 5. Experimental Encounters: Filipino and Hawaiian Bodies in the U.S. Imperial Invention of Odontoclasia, 1928–1946
      Chapter 6. Los Indios Bravos: The Filipino/American Lyric and the Cosmopoetics of Comparative Indigeneity
      Part II: "Unexpected" Indigenous Modernity
      Chapter 7. Decolonization in Unexpected Places: Native Evangelicalism and the Rearticulation of Mission
      Chapter 8. Transnational Indigenous Exchange: Rethinking Global Interactions of Indigenous Peoples at the 1904 St. Louis Exposition
      Chapter 9. "Sioux Yells" in the Dawes Era: Lakota "Indian Play," the Wild West, and the Literatures of Luther Standing Bear
      Chapter 10. Mexican Indigenismo, Choctaw Self-Determination, and Todd Downing's Detective Novels
      Chapter 11. Maori Cowboys, Maori Indians
      Chapter 12. A Dying West? Reimagining the Frontier in Frank Matsura's Photography, 1903–1913
      Part III: Nation and Nation-State
      Chapter 13. Between Dangerous Extremes: Victimization, Ultranationalism, and Identity Performance in Gerald Vizenor's Hiroshima Bugi: Atomu 57
      Chapter 14. Toward a U.S.-China Comparative Critique: Indigenous Rights and National Expansion in Alex Kuo's Panda Diaries
      Chapter 15. "Sowing Death in Our Women's Wombs": Modernization and Indigenous Nationalism in the 1960s Peace Corps and Jorge Sanjinés' Yawar Mallku
      Contributors
      Index

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