A Separate Country: Postcoloniality and American Indian Nations

A Separate Country: Postcoloniality and American Indian Nations

by Elizabeth Cook-Lynn
A Separate Country: Postcoloniality and American Indian Nations

A Separate Country: Postcoloniality and American Indian Nations

by Elizabeth Cook-Lynn

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Overview

Elizabeth Cook-Lynn takes academia to task for its much-touted notion that “postcoloniality” is the current condition of Indian communities in the United States. She finds the argument neither believable nor useful—at best an ivory-tower initiative on the part of influential scholars, at worst a cruel joke. In this fin de career retrospective, Cook-Lynn gathers evidence that American Indians remain among the most colonized people in the modern world, mired in poverty and disenfranchised both socially and politically. Despite Native-initiated efforts toward seeking First Nationhood status in the U. S., Cook-Lynn posits, Indian lands remain in the grip of a centuries-old English colonial system—a renewable source of conflict and discrimination. She argues that proportionately in the last century, government-supported development of casinos and tourism—peddled as an answer to poverty—probably cost Indians more treaty-protected land than they lost in the entire nineteenth century. Using land issues and third-world theory to look at the historiography of the American Plains Indian experience, she examines colonization’s continuing assault on Indigenous peoples.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780896727250
Publisher: Texas Tech University Press
Publication date: 11/01/2011
Edition description: 1
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Elizabeth Cook-Lynn of the Crow Creek Sioux Nation is a writer, poet, and professor emerita of Native American studies at Eastern Washington University. Among her many honors is the Oyate Igluwitaya award given by Native university students in South Dakota to those who "aid in the ability of The People to see clearly in the company of each other."

Table of Contents


Contents Words to Dazzle the Mind, an Introduction I: The Indian Postmodern Situating Postcolonial Studies Indigeneity as a Category of Analysis A New Understanding Elimination-ism Looking Westward Law--The Task of Justification II: Imponderables A Critical Brief Citizen! Citizen!
The Cynical Tourist What about Violence?
Misogyny Dilemma of Language Balancing Acts for Academic Risk Takers Taku inichiapi? What's in a Name?
III: Two Case Studies A case study in political genocide: 1888
A case study in literary genocide: 1920-30
IV: Postcoloniality Is Now the Time?
State Governmental Power vs. Tribal-Nation Autonomy
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