"Producing Sovereignty is a must-read for those interested in the theoretical fundamentals of Indigenous media studies. By unearthing and revealing the subjugated histories and materiality of Indigenous artists and filmmakers, Karrmen Crey provides a crucial lens into the co-constitutive production of Indigenous aesthetics as an outcome of institutional contestations."-Brendan Hokowhitu, University of Queensland "One of the most engaging and sophisticated books in the field, Producing Sovereignty uses highly immersive case studies to locate Indigenous media within wider social movements and cultural developments in North America. Karrmen Crey speaks to the decolonizing force of Indigenous media-not only as expressions of Indigenous cultural sovereignty but as destabilizing forces within contemporary settler societies."-Marian Bredin, coeditor of Canadian Television: Text and Context"Crey’s book is thoroughly documented and well illustrated with stills from films and videos. She declares that her ambition is to create a template for future media studies, and she has surely achieved that goal. The bibliography is detailed and the index is intelligently designed."-Choice