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Indigenous Inhumanities: California Indian Studies after the Apocalypse: Indigenous Americas

Autor Mark Minch-de Leon
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 noi 2025
Reclaiming power and prophecy through California Indian intellectual resurgence and anticolonial resistance

 
Mark Minch-de Leon explores the anticolonial dimensions of California Indian intellectual and cultural resurgence in the aftermath of apocalypse in this compelling reexamination of Indigenous art, literature, and theory. Centering on a reinterpretation of the Ghost Dance, a ceremony first practiced in the nineteenth century, as a collective demonstration of prophecy and resilience, Indigenous Inhumanities envisions an expanded poetics of resistance through a reconfigured relationship to death and the dead. By dismantling the colonial frameworks of inclusion, recognition, and representation that reinforce settler-state power, Minch-de Leon shows how storytelling can be reclaimed as both research and as a tool for decolonization.
 
Taking up critical issues that the state has used to discipline California Indian relations to ancestors, such as the politics of human remains repatriation and the discourse around California Indian genocide, Minch-de Leon centers Indigenous knowledge and social systems while challenging legal and political definitions of violence, power, and the human. Rich case studies showcase the evocative art of Frank Day, the poetry of Tommy Pico, and the writings of Deborah Miranda, highlighting how these creators advance Indigenous theory and disrupt settler categories.
 
By refusing reconciliation and embracing Indigenous frameworks of radical relationality and the “inhuman” (what lies outside of human control), Minch-de Leon presents a bold vision of Indigenous antihumanist survival and resurgence. Indigenous Inhumanities illuminates the path toward decolonial futures by following the radical turn the ancestors made toward the powers of the dead to bring an end to the colonial world.
 
 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781517918309
ISBN-10: 1517918308
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: 14 black and white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: University of Minnesota Press
Colecția Univ Of Minnesota Press
Seria Indigenous Americas


Notă biografică

Mark Minch-de Leon is assistant professor of Indigenous studies in the Department of English at the University of California, Riverside. He is an enrolled member of the Susanville Indian Rancheria.

Cuprins

Contents
Prologue: (Re)Turning
Introduction: Researching
Part I. Ancestor
1. The California Indian Bone Game
2. The Postapocalyptic Imaginary
3. Refusing Genocide
Interlude: How Death Came into This World
Part II. The Destruction
4. Bad Indians and the Destruction of Writing
5. Atlas for a Destroyed World
Conclusion: Bad Writing, Bad Art
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index

Recenzii

"A mind-blowing framework that informs Indigenous story in ways we don’t yet recognize, Indigenous Inhumanities proves how much we are missing when Indian literatures are not taught in their fullest and most powerful entirety. Mark Minch-de Leon recuperates ‘survival’ to mean not just emergence from destruction but also the reinvention of cultural practices that cannot be captured by representations of Indigenous lives."—Deborah A. Miranda, author of Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoi
"A vision for the future of the humanities, Indigenous Inhumanities challenges us to dismantle colonial legacies and stands as an important contribution to the ongoing growth of California Indian studies. Continuing the legacy of California Indian storytelling, Mark Minch-de Leon inspires and lays new foundations for the future of Native American studies."—Cutcha Risling Baldy, author of We Are Dancing for You: Native Feminisms and the Revitalization of Women’s Coming-of-Age Ceremonies