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ID158464
Title ProperRecognition, antiracism & indigenous futures
Other Title Informationa view from connecticut
LanguageENG
AuthorOuden, Amy E. Den
Summary / Abstract (Note)This essay is offered as a tribute to Golden Hill Paugussett Chief Big Eagle and his defiance of the entrenched racism to which his tribal community has been subjected. I situate this analysis in Connecticut in the early 1970s at a moment of particular historical significance in tribal nations' centuries-long struggles to assert their sovereignty, defend reservation lands, and ensure their futures. I analyze how the racialization of Native peoples in Connecticut informed the state's management of “Indian affairs” in this period and argue that the virulent racism of the state's antirecognition policy in the late twentieth century reflects a long history of institutionally embedded racist policies and practices. In this essay, I call for politically engaged, antiracist research that is concerned with understanding the complexities of tribal sovereignty asserted in local contexts in which governmental control of Indian affairs reproduces and validates White-supremacist ideology.
`In' analytical NoteDaedalus Vol. 147, No.2; Spring 2018: p.27-38
Journal SourceDaedalus Vol: 147 No 2
Key WordsRecognition ;  Antiracism ;  Indigenous Futures ;  View from Connecticut


 
 
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