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What would Indigenous resurgence look like if the parameters were not set with a focus on the state, settlers, or an achievement of reconciliation? Indigenous Resurgence in an Age of Reconciliation explores the central concerns and challenges facing Indigenous nations in their resurgence efforts, while also mapping the gaps and limitations of both reconciliation and resurgence frameworks.The essays in this collection centre the work of Indigenous communities, knowledge, and strategies for resurgence and, where appropriate, reconciliation. The book challenges narrow interpretations of indigeneity and resurgence, asking readers to take up a critical analysis of how settler colonial and heteronormative framings have infiltrated our own ways of relating to our selves, one another, and to place. The authors seek to (re)claim Indigenous relationships to the political and offer critical self-reflection to ensure Indigenous resurgence efforts do not reproduce the very conditions and contexts from which liberation is sought.Illuminating the interconnectivity between and across life in all its forms, this important collection calls on readers to think expansively and critically about Indigenous resurgence in an age of reconciliation.
Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark is an associate professor of Indigenous governance at the University of Victoria.Aimée Craft is an associate professor in the faculty of law at the University of Ottawa. Hōkūlani K. Aikau is a professor of Indigenous governance at the University of Victoria.
Artist StatementLianne Marie Leda CharlieIntroduction: Generating a Critical Resurgence TogetherHeidi Kiiwetinepinesiik StarkPart 1: Realizing Resurgence Together1. Beyond the Grammar of Settler ApologiesMishuana Goeman2. Spirit and Matter: Resurgence as Rising and (Re)creation as EthosDian Million3. Removing Weeds so Natives Can Grow: A Metaphor ReconsideredHōkūlani K. Aikau4. (Ad)dressing Wounds: Expansive Kinship Inside and OutDallas HuntPart 2: Claiming Our Relationships to the Political5. Beyond Rights and Wrongs: Towards Resurgence of a Treaty-Based Ethic of RelationalityGina Starblanket6. Thawing the Frozen Rights Theory: On Rejecting Interpretations of Reconciliation and Resurgence That Define Indigenous Peoples as Frozen in a Pre-colonial PastAimée Craft7. Nêhiyaw Hunting Pedagogies and Revitalizing Indigenous LawsDarcy LindbergPart 3: Narrating Reconciliation and Resurgence8. Thinking through Resurgence Together: A Conversation between Sarah Hunt/Tłaliłila’ogwa and Leanne Betasamosake SimpsonSarah Hunt/Tłaliłila’ogwa and Leanne Betasamosake Simpson9. Truth-Telling amidst Reconciliation Discourses: How Stories Reshape Our RelationshipsJeff Corntassel10. Political Action in the Time of ReconciliationCorey Snelgrove and Matthew WildcatPart 4: Reconciling Lands, Bodies, and Gender11. Body Land, Water, and Resurgence in OaxacaIsabel Altamirano-Jiménez12. To Respect Indigenous Territorial Protocol: Hosting the Olympic Games on Indigenous Lands in Settler Colonial CanadaChristine O’Bonsawin13. "Descendants of the Original Lords of the Soil": Gender, Kinship, and an Indignant Model of Métis NationhoodDaniel Voth14. Red UtopiaBilly-Ray BelcourtContributors