Description

Book Synopsis
Mark Rifkin explores how Indigenous experiences with time and the dominance of settler colonial conceptions of temporality have affected Native peoplehood and sovereignty, thereby rethinking the very terms by which history is created and organized around time by.

Trade Review
"Rifkin offers the compelling argument that challenging normative settler time engenders new possibilities for Native articulations of futurity." -- Stephanie Lumsden * Studies in American Indian Literatures *
"Rifkin’s book presents a novel and ambitious perspective in analysing the process of land dispossession and forced assimilation of Native Americans during the consolidation of the U.S. national state in the nineteenth century and its afterlife." -- Carolina Aguilera * Ethnic and Racial Studies *
"A theoretically robust and intellectually satisfying work that challenges readers to think differently not only about the past, but also about time. . . . A welcome addition to the robust body of interdisciplinary writing that has become renowned for its thick descriptions of space and place. . . . Rifkin’s approach is innovative, his analysis is theoretically sophisticated, the scaffolding upon which his analysis hangs is inspiring, and the vocabulary he advances is both useful and empowering." -- Kieth Thor Carlson * American Historical Review *
"A quite brilliant work of theory. . . ." -- James Mackay * American Literary History *
"Rifkin’s work moves us toward a more expansive understanding of the ways in which collective memory, ceremonial practices, prophesy, oral traditions, and place- based knowledges inform Indigenous corpo-realities and shape quotidian experiences of synchronously felt pasts, presents, and futures. This text is a critical addition to Native American studies and should be read by all striving for a decolonial future."
-- Sarah Whitt * American Indian Quarterly *
"It is impossible in a brief review to do justice to the full richness of Beyond Settler Time. Rifkin is meticulous in positioning his own work in relation to other scholarship, and while at times this forces the reader to work through the extant discourse surrounding a particular novel or text to get at the new interpretive kernel, that work is always rewarding. . . . Beyond Settler Time is a valuable contribution to the field of indigenous studies." -- David J. Carlson * Journal of American Studies *
"Beyond Settler Time provides a necessary and important intervention in theorizations of time in Native American literature and history. Rifkin presents a set of analytic tools that scholars can employ when engaging Indigenous texts with temporal formations, shedding light upon crucial differences in Native American conceptions of time, place, and becoming." -- Penelope Kelsey * Western American Literature *

Table of Contents
Preface vii
Acknowledgments xv
1. Indigenous Orientations 1
2. The Silence of Ely S. Parker 49
3. The Duration of the Land 95
4. Ghost Dancing at Century's End 129
Coda. Deferring Juridical Time 179
Notes 193
Bibliography 241
Index 269

Beyond Settler Time

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    A Paperback / softback by Mark Rifkin

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      View other formats and editions of Beyond Settler Time by Mark Rifkin

      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 24/02/2017
      ISBN13: 9780822362975, 978-0822362975
      ISBN10: 082236297X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Mark Rifkin explores how Indigenous experiences with time and the dominance of settler colonial conceptions of temporality have affected Native peoplehood and sovereignty, thereby rethinking the very terms by which history is created and organized around time by.

      Trade Review
      "Rifkin offers the compelling argument that challenging normative settler time engenders new possibilities for Native articulations of futurity." -- Stephanie Lumsden * Studies in American Indian Literatures *
      "Rifkin’s book presents a novel and ambitious perspective in analysing the process of land dispossession and forced assimilation of Native Americans during the consolidation of the U.S. national state in the nineteenth century and its afterlife." -- Carolina Aguilera * Ethnic and Racial Studies *
      "A theoretically robust and intellectually satisfying work that challenges readers to think differently not only about the past, but also about time. . . . A welcome addition to the robust body of interdisciplinary writing that has become renowned for its thick descriptions of space and place. . . . Rifkin’s approach is innovative, his analysis is theoretically sophisticated, the scaffolding upon which his analysis hangs is inspiring, and the vocabulary he advances is both useful and empowering." -- Kieth Thor Carlson * American Historical Review *
      "A quite brilliant work of theory. . . ." -- James Mackay * American Literary History *
      "Rifkin’s work moves us toward a more expansive understanding of the ways in which collective memory, ceremonial practices, prophesy, oral traditions, and place- based knowledges inform Indigenous corpo-realities and shape quotidian experiences of synchronously felt pasts, presents, and futures. This text is a critical addition to Native American studies and should be read by all striving for a decolonial future."
      -- Sarah Whitt * American Indian Quarterly *
      "It is impossible in a brief review to do justice to the full richness of Beyond Settler Time. Rifkin is meticulous in positioning his own work in relation to other scholarship, and while at times this forces the reader to work through the extant discourse surrounding a particular novel or text to get at the new interpretive kernel, that work is always rewarding. . . . Beyond Settler Time is a valuable contribution to the field of indigenous studies." -- David J. Carlson * Journal of American Studies *
      "Beyond Settler Time provides a necessary and important intervention in theorizations of time in Native American literature and history. Rifkin presents a set of analytic tools that scholars can employ when engaging Indigenous texts with temporal formations, shedding light upon crucial differences in Native American conceptions of time, place, and becoming." -- Penelope Kelsey * Western American Literature *

      Table of Contents
      Preface vii
      Acknowledgments xv
      1. Indigenous Orientations 1
      2. The Silence of Ely S. Parker 49
      3. The Duration of the Land 95
      4. Ghost Dancing at Century's End 129
      Coda. Deferring Juridical Time 179
      Notes 193
      Bibliography 241
      Index 269

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