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Making Space for Indigenous Feminism, 3rd Edition

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The third edition of this iconic collection features Indigenous feminist voices from across generations and locations, including many exciting new contributors.
“Making Space for Indigenous Feminism provides us with powerful voices ... Read More
  • Format:
  • Publication Date: 23 May 2024
  • ISBN: 9781773635507
  • Pages: 320
  • Imprint: Fernwood Publishing

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This book bridges generations of powerful Indigenous feminist thinking to demonstrate the movement’s cruciality for today. Indigenous feminists in the first edition fought for feminism to be considered a valid and essential intellectual and activist position. The second edition animated Indigenous feminisms through real-world applications. This third edition, curated by award-winning scholar Gina Starblanket, reflects and celebrates Indigenous feminism’s intergenerational longevity through the changing landscape of anti-colonial struggle and theory. Diverse contributors examine Indigenous feminism’s ongoing relevance to contemporary contexts and debates, including queer and Two-Spirit approaches to decolonization, gendered and sexualized violence, storytelling and narrative, land-based presence, Black and Indigenous relationalities and more. Feminism has much to offer Indigenous women, and all Indigenous Peoples, in their struggles against oppression.
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Price: $40.00
Pages: 320
Publisher: Fernwood Publishing
Imprint: Fernwood Publishing
Publication Date: 23 May 2024
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781773635507
Format: Paperback
Making Space for Indigenous Feminism provides us with powerful voices emerging from and incorporating past, present, and future. Each chapter continues to make space for the power of Indigenous feminisms, as women, femme, Queer, LGBTQS+ and Mad think together in a powerful analysis of our now. This latest edition of a classic, newly edited by Gina Starblanket, includes Elders and youth and brings us back to why Indigenous feminisms are the embodied, lived, and felt knowledges that will inform our struggles going forward.”
— Dian Million, University of Washington, American Indian Studies
Dr. Gina Starblanket is an associate professor in the School of Indigenous Governance at the University of Victoria. She is Cree/Saulteaux and a member of the Star Blanket Cree Nation in Treaty 4. Dr. Starblanket studies Indigenous–settler political relations with a specific focus on Indigenous politics in the prairies, the politics of treaty implementation and Indigenous movements towards social and political transformation. She is the author of important sole and co-authored interventions theorizing relational responsibilities to the land, including Storying Violence: Unravelling Colonial Narratives in the Stanley Trial and the fifth edition of Visions of the Heart: Issues Involving Indigenous Peoples in Canada.

: Extending Our Accounts of Indigenous Feminism—Joyce Green and Gina Starblanket
Section I: Home | Identity | Legacies:
: Always Coming Home: Indigenous Identity, Indigenous Feminism, Scholarship and Life—Joyce Green
: Why Am I a Feminist?—Emma LaRocque
: Settler Colonialism in Canada: Making “Indian” Women Disappear—Mary Eberts, Shelagh Day, Sharon McIvor
Section II: Institutions | Representation | Resistance:
: Red Ticket Women: Revisiting the Political Contributions of the Indian Rights for Indian Women’s Movement—Gina Starblanket
: Perpetual State of Violence: An Indigenous Feminist Anti-Oppression Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls—Robyn Bourgeois
: Gender Reveals that Matter: Cis-Heteropatriarchy, Settler Colonialism, and Child Welfare—Megan Scribe
Section III: Land | Relationality | Love :
: Towards an Anti-Colonial Feminist Care Ethic—Eva Jewell
: Our Movements Need some Love as Well: Indigenous Land Defense and Relationality—Isabel Altamirano-Jimenez
: Mana Wahine and Mothering at the Loʻi: A Two-Spirit/Queer Analysis—Hōkūlani K. Aikau
Section IV: Decoloniality | Movement | Futurities :
: Decolonization is a Queer Desire: Poetics, Politics, Negativity—Billy-Ray Belcourt
: Mad Indigenous Womanhood and the Psycho-Politics of Settler Colonialism—Cara Peacock
: On Black and Indigenous Relationality: A Conversation—Gina Starblanket, Robyn Maynard, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
: Decolonization is Also Metaphorical: Indigenous Feminist and Queer-Two-Spirit Storywork Matters—Kelly Aguirre