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The Politics of Indigeneity : Dialogues and Reflections on Indigenous Activism.

The Politics of Indigeneity explores the concept of Indigeneity across the world and the ways in which it intersects with local, national and international social and political realities. The authors discuss with Indigenous spokespersons, scholars and activists the possibilities of a 'second-wa...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Venkateswar, Sita
Otros Autores: Hughes, Emma (Research advisor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: London : Zed Books, 2011.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • About the editors; Figures and table; Figures; 1.1 Ayoreo territory; 1.2 Aquino Aquiraoi Picanerai; 1.3 Mateo Sobode Chiquenoi II; 3.1 Batwa ancestral territories; 4.1 New Nubia; 4.2 Old Nubia; 5.1 Thailand; 6.1 The Nicobar Islands; 6.2 Chupon and Simron Singh; 7.1 The Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal; Table; 4.1 Political timeline for Nubia; Abbreviations; Additional materials; Introduction; Invocation: What the spirit said to Ibegua Chiqueñoro; Credits; Part One. Settler: South America and New Zealand.
  • 1. Being Indigenous: the concept of Indigeneity, a conversation with two Ayoreo leadersIntroduction; Figure 1.1 Ayoreo territory; Methodology; The interview; Figure 1.2 Aquino Aquiraoi Picanerai; Figure 1.3 Mateo Sobode Chiquenoi II; Conclusions; Comment; Simron Jit Singh; Reply; Acknowledgments; 2. Beyond Indigenous civilities: Indigenous matters; 1INDIGENOUS STRUGGLES; 2INDIGENOUS CIVILITIES; A response from the wilderness; The backstory: Gareth's challenge; Reclamation of the discursive terrain: shifting across two different plains of interaction.
  • The reclamation of language and the imaginative space
  • claiming a right to the future3VISIONS FOR THE FUTURE; Moana Jackson's response; Helen Te Hira's response; Helen Potter's response; Kane Te Manakura's response; Ian Takarangi's response; Comment; Avril Bell; Reply: Teanau Tuiono; Reply: Avril Bell; Conclusion; Glossary; Acknowledgements; Part Two. Post-colonial: Africa and Asia; 3. Mapping everyday practices as rights of resistance: Indigenous peoples in Central Africa; Introduction; Figure 3.1 Batwa ancestral territories; 1 INDIGENEITY AS LIVED EXPERIENCE; Interview 1; Interview 2.
  • 2 INDIGENEITY AS SUBVERSIONThe difficulty in acceptance; A legitimate alternative; 3 INDIGENEITY AS ACCOMMODATION; Conclusion; Comment; Benno Glauser; Reply; 4. Displacement and indigenous rights: the Nubian case; Introduction; 1 DIALOGUES; Interview 1: Suad Ibrahim Ahmed, 11 April 2008, Khartoum; Interview 2: Dr Ahmed Sokarno, lecturer in linguistics at South Valley University, Aswan, 1 April, Aswan; Figure 4.1 New Nubia; Figure 4.2 Old Nubia; 2 INDIGENOUS RIGHTS AND IDENTITY POLITICS; Division, relocation and gendered change; Relationship with the state
  • the line you cannot cross.
  • Politicization of identityVisions for the future; Comment; Christopher Kidd; Reply; Table 4.1 Political timeline for Nubia; Acknowledgements; 5. Being Indigenous in northern Thailand; Highlanders as Indigenous peoples; The challenges of being Indigenous in northern Thailand; Working to claim Indigeneity; DIALOGUE; NGO/activist views; Village views; Figure 5.1 Thailand; Analysis; Comment; Sita Venkateswar; Reply; Glossary; Acknowledgements; 6. Chupon's dilemma: a dialogue; Prologue; Figure 6.1 The Nicobar Islands; Chupon's dilemma; Figure 6.2 Chupon and Simron Singh; Epilogue; Comment.