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Fighting Colonialism With Hegemonic Culture Native American Appropriation Of Indian Stereotypes Maureen Trudelle Schwarz

  • SKU: BELL-5233646
Fighting Colonialism With Hegemonic Culture Native American Appropriation Of Indian Stereotypes Maureen Trudelle Schwarz
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Fighting Colonialism With Hegemonic Culture Native American Appropriation Of Indian Stereotypes Maureen Trudelle Schwarz instant download after payment.

Publisher: State University of New York Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 4.94 MB
Pages: 235
Author: Maureen Trudelle Schwarz
ISBN: 9781438445939, 1438445938
Language: English
Year: 2013

Product desciption

Fighting Colonialism With Hegemonic Culture Native American Appropriation Of Indian Stereotypes Maureen Trudelle Schwarz by Maureen Trudelle Schwarz 9781438445939, 1438445938 instant download after payment.

Explores how American Indian businesses and organizations are taking on images that were designed to oppress them.
How and why do American Indians appropriate images of Indians for their own purposes? How do these representatives promote and sometimes challenge sovereignty for indigenous people locally and nationally? American Indians have recently taken on a new relationship with the hegemonic culture designed to oppress them. Rather than protesting it, they are earmarking images from it and using them for their own ends. This provocative book adds an interesting twist and nuance to our understanding of the five-hundred year interchange between American Indians and others. A host of examples of how American Indians use the so-called “White Man’s Indian” reveal the key images and issues selected most frequently by the representatives of Native organizations or Native-owned businesses in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries to appropriate Indianness.
“This groundbreaking initial examination of the interrelated dimensions of the contemporary economic relationship between American Indians and the hegemonic culture also provides important historical summaries for relevant First Nations as well as the supranational experience.” — CHOICE

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