Indigenous Studies Spring 2021 Catalogue

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Indigenous Studies Spring 2021

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Territories & sales rights CAP distributes in the UK, Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA), and Asia-Pacific (APAC) Please note the exclusions in APAC for the below publishers. UBC Press - China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan ONLY University of Illinois Press - China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan ONLY University of Minnesota Press - All of APAC excluding Japan & ANZ New York University Press - All of APAC excluding SE Asia & ANZ Temple University Press - UK & EMEA ONLY

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A People and a Nation

Bead by Bead

New Directions in Contemporary Métis Studies Edited by Jennifer Adese & Chris Andersen

Constitutional Rights and Métis Community Yvonne Boyer & Larry Chartrand Foreword by Tony Belcourt

March 2021 248pp 9780774865067 £49.00/ $75.00 HB

May 2021 212pp 9780774865968 £59.00/ $89.95 HB

UBC PRESS UBC PRESS

The authors, most of whom are themselves Mé�s, offer readers a set of lenses through which to consider the complexity of historical and contemporary Mé�s na�onhood and peoplehood.

Lays bare the failure of judicial doctrine and government policy to address Mé�s rights, and offers construc�ve insights on ways to advance reconcilia�on and find pathways to respec�ul, inclusive Mé�s-Canadian cons�tu�onal rela�onships.

Excludes SE Asia, Indian sc & ANZ

Excludes SE Asia, Indian sc & ANZ

Black Snake

Clackamas Chinook Performance Art

Standing Rock, the Dakota Access Pipeline, and Environmental Justice Katherine Wiltenburg Todrys

Verse Form Interpretations Edited by Catharine Mason Studies in the Anthropology of North American Indians March 2021 280pp 1 illus., 1 table, index 9781496224118 £50.00/ $60.00 HB

June 2021 336pp 28 photos, 1 map, index 9781496222664 £19.99/ $24.95 PB

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

Black Snake tells the story of the controversial Dakota Access Pipeline through the ac�vism of four women from Standing Rock and Fort Berthold Reserva�ons.

Carefully edited by Catharine Mason, Clackamas Chinook Performance Art pairs performances with biographical, family, and historical content that reflects Victoria Howardʼs ancestry, personal and social life, educa�on, and worldview.

How the West Was Drawn

Inalienable Properties The Political Economy of Indigenous Land Reform Jamie Baxter

Mapping, Indians, and the Construction of the TransMississippi West David Bernstein

Law and Society February 2021 226pp 3 illus., 3 tables 9780774863438 £20.99/ $35.95 PB

Borderlands and Transcultural Studies March 2021 330pp 8 illus., 46 maps, index 9781496224927 £23.99/ $30.00 NIP

UBC PRESS

Drawing on new research about ins�tu�onal change in organiza�onal se�ngs, explores when and how community leaders have sustained inalienable land rights without turning to either persuasion or coercive force – the two levers of power normally associated with poli�cal leadership.

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

A revisionist and interdisciplinary understanding of the global imperial contest for North America’s Great Plains that provides the fine details of the Pawnees’, Iowas’, and Lakotas’ geopoli�cal and cultural strategies in a rapidly changing world.

Excludes SE Asia, Indian sc & ANZ

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Indigenous Languages and the Promise of Archives

Invested Indifference

How Violence Persists in Settler Colonial Society Kara Granzow

Edited by Adrianna Link, Abigail Shelton & Patrick Spero

February 2021 284pp 9780774837446 £20.99/ $35.95 PB

New Visions in Na�ve American and Indigenous Studies May 2021 534pp 22 figures, 4 tables, 1 map, index 9781496224620 £37.00/ $45.00 PB 9781496224330 £82.00/ $99.00 HB

UBC PRESS

Exposes the tenacity of violence against Indigenous people, demonstra�ng that mechanisms such as the law, medicine, and control of land and space have been used to entrench violence against Indigenous people in the social construc�on of Canadian na�onhood.

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

Explores new applica�ons of the American Philosophical Society’s library materials as scholars seek to partner on projects that assist ongoing efforts at cultural and linguis�c revitaliza�on movements within Na�ve communi�es.

Excludes SE Asia, Indian sc & ANZ

Jesintel

Kabbalah and the Founding of America

Living Wisdom from Coast Salish Elders Children of the Setting Sun Productions, Edited by Natasha Frey & Darrell Hillaire, Photos by Fay “Beau” Garreau, Jr., Afterword by Danita Washington

The Early Influence of Jewish Thought in the New World Brian Ogren

July 2021 320pp 5 b&w illus. 9781479807987 £32.00/ $39.00 HB

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS

Kabbalah and the Founding of America traces the influence of Kabbalah on early Chris�an Americans. It offers a new picture of Jewish-Chris�an intellectual exchange in pre-Revolu�onary America, and illuminates how Kabbalah helped to shape early American religious sensibili�es.

July 2021 304pp 144 color illus., 1 map 9780295748641 £26.99/ $34.95 PB

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PRESS

Jesintel—“to learn and grow together”— characterizes the spirit of this book, which brings the cultural teachings of nineteen Coast Salish elders to new genera�ons.

Excludes SE Asia & ANZ

Lakota Texts

Le Maya Q’atzij/Our Maya Word

Narratives of Lakota Life and Culture in the Twentieth Century Regina Pustet

Poetics of Resistance in Guatemala Emil’ Keme

Studies in the Anthropology of North American Indians April 2021 498pp 2 tables, 1 appendix 9780803237353 £70.00/ $85.00 HB

Indigenous Americas June 2021 264pp 9781517908089 £19.99/ $25.00 PB 9781517908072 £83.00/ $100.00 HB

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS

Lakota Texts is a treasure trove of stories told in the original language by modern Lakota women who make their home in Denver. Some�mes wi�y, o�en moving, and invariably engaging and fascina�ng, these stories are both autobiographical and cultural.

Within the context of the armed conflict and the postwar period in Guatemala, K’iche’ Maya scholar Emil’ Keme iden�fies three historical phases of Indigenous Maya literary insurgency in which Maya authors use poetry to dignify their dis�nct cultural, poli�cal, gender, sexual, and linguis�c iden��es. Excludes Japan & ANZ

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Mapping Abundance for a Planetary Future

Ocean Passages

Navigating Pacific Islander and Asian American Literatures Erin Suzuki

Kanaka Maoli and Critical Settler Cartographies in Hawai'i Candace Fujikane

Cri�cal Race, Indigeneity, and Rela�onality March 2021 268pp 9781439920947 £32.00/ $39.95 PB 9781439920930 £88.00/ $110.50 HB

February 2021 304pp 53 illus., incl. 16 in color 9781478011682 £20.99/ $26.95 PB 9781478010562 £83.00/ $99.95 HB

DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Candace Fujikane draws upon Hawaiian legends about the land and water and their impact upon Na�ve Hawai‘ian struggles to argue that Na�ve economies of abundance provide a founda�on for collec�ve work against climate change.

Explores how movement through—and travel across—the ocean mediates the construc�on of Asian American and Indigenous Pacific subjec�vi�es in the wake of the colonial conflicts that shaped the modern transpacific. Excludes Asia Pacific

Painful Beauty

Pollution Is Colonialism

Tlingit Women, Beadwork, and the Art of Resilience Megan A. Smetzer

Max Liboiron

May 2021 216pp 10 illus. 9781478014133 £20.99/ $25.95 PB 9781478013228 £83.00/ $99.95 HB

Na�ve Art of the Pacific Northwest: A Bill Holm Center Series July 2021 240pp 78 color illus., 15 b&w illus., 1 map 9780295748948 £32.00/ $39.95 HB

DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Max Liboiron models an an�colonial scien�fic prac�ce aligned with Indigenous concepts of land, ethics, and rela�ons to outline the entanglements of capitalism, colonialism, and environmental science.

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PRESS

For over 150 years, Tlingit women ar�sts have beaded colorful, intricately beau�ful designs on moccasins, dolls, octopus bags, tunics, and other garments. Megan Smetzer reframes this o�en overlooked ar�orm as a site of historical nego�a�ons and contemporary inspira�ons.

Shifting Grounds

Slow Disturbance

Landscape in Contemporary Native American Art Kate Morris

Infrastructural Mediation on the Settler Colonial Resource Frontier Rafico Ruiz

February 2021 208pp 46 color illus. 9780295749167 £26.99/ $35.00 NIP

Sign, Storage, Transmission April 2021 248pp 102 illus. 9781478008507 £20.99/ $25.95 PB 9781478007982 £83.00/ $99.95 HB

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PRESS

Art historian Kate Morris argues that Indigenous ar�sts are expanding and reconceptualizing the forms of the genre, expressing Indigenous a�tudes toward land and belonging even as they draw upon mainstream art prac�ces.

DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Rafico Ruiz uses the Grenfell Mission in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, to theorize how se�ler colonialism establishes itself through the building, maintenance, and media�on of sitespecific infrastructure. 4


Spatial and Discursive Violence in the US Southwest

The Apache Diaspora

Four Centuries of Displacement and Survival Paul Conrad

Rosaura Sánchez & Beatrice Pita

America in the Nineteenth Century April 2021 400pp 17 hal�ones, 6 maps 9780812253016 £27.99/ $34.95 HB

March 2021 280pp 9781478011736 £20.99/ $26.95 PB 9781478010609 £83.00/ $99.95 HB

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS

DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS

The Apache Diaspora brings to life the stories of displaced Apaches and the kin from whom they were separated. Paul Conrad charts Apaches’ efforts to survive or return home from places as far-flung as Cuba and Pennsylvania, Mexico City and Montreal.

Analyzing a range of Chicano/a and Na�ve American novels, films, short stories and other cultural ar�facts from the eighteenth century to the present, Rosaura Sánchez and Beatrice Pita examine literary representa�ons of se�ler colonial land enclosure and dispossession in the US Southwest.

The Greater Plains

The Indigenous Paleolithic of the Western Hemisphere

Rethinking a Region’s Environmental Histories Edited by Brian Frehner & Kathleen A. Brosnan

Paulette F. C. Steeves

July 2021 324pp 10 illus., 5 maps, 7 tables, 1 appendix, index 9781496202178 £54.00/ $65.00 HB

July 2021 426pp 10 photos, 5 illus., 8 maps, 3 tables, 3 figures, index 9781496226471 £23.99/ $30.00 PB 9781496225078 £82.00/ $99.00 HB

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

Steeves presents evidence that archaeology sites, Paleo environments, landscapes, and mammalian and human migra�ons between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres predate Clovis culture (11,200 years ago).

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

This collec�on of essays represents an a�empt to move beyond degrada�on and exploita�on as the defining ecological narra�ves of the Great Plains by examining the region through the interrelated themes of water, grasses, animals, and energy.

The Kingdom and the Republic

The Modoc War

A Story of Genocide at the Dawn of America's Gilded Age Robert Aquinas McNally

Sovereign Hawai’i and the Early United States Noelani Arista

April 2021 432pp 9 photos, 2 illus., 2 maps, index 9781496224910 £19.99/ $24.95 NIP

America in the Nineteenth Century May 2021 312pp 12 illus. 9780812224917 £19.99/ $24.95 PB

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

Robert Aquinas McNally tells the wrenching story of the Modoc War of 1872–73, one of the na�on’s most drama�c conflicts against North American Indigenous peoples.

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS

In The Kingdom and the Republic, Noelani Arista uncovers a trove of previously unused Hawaiian language documents to chronicle Hawaiians’ experience of encounter and colonialism in the nineteenth century, reconfiguring familiar histories of trade, prosely�za�on, and nego�a�ons over law and governance in Hawaiʻi. 5


The New White Race

To Share, Not Surrender

Settler Colonialism and the Press in French Algeria, 18601914 Charlotte Ann Legg

Indigenous and Settler Visions of Treaty-Making in the Colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia Edited by Peter Cook,Neil Vallance,John Sutton Lutz, Graham Brazier & Hamar Foster

France Overseas: Studies in Empire and Decoloniza�on June 2021 306pp 9 illus., index 9781496208507 £45.00/ $55.00 HB

May 2021 330pp 27 b&w photos, 3 maps 9780774863827 £59.00/ $89.95 HB

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

UBC PRESS

Traces the development of the press in Algeria between 1860 and 1914, examining the par�cular role of journalists in shaping the power dynamics of se�ler colonialism.

Presents multiple views and lived experience of the treaty-making process and its repercussions, and publishes, for the first �me, the Vancouver Island Trea�es in First Na�ons languages. Excludes SE Asia, Indian sc & ANZ

Writing the Hamat’sa

Recent Highlights

Ethnography, Colonialism, and the Cannibal Dance Aaron Glass

A Bounded Land Reflections on Settler Colonialism in Canada R. Cole Harris

May 2021 448pp 29 b&w photos, 2 maps 9780774863773 £62.00/ $95.00 HB

UBC PRESS

November 2020 304pp 4 colour photos, 14 maps, 3 tables 9780774864411 £26.99/ $39.95 HB

Cri�cally surveys four centuries of archival, published, and oral sources to trace the a�empted prohibi�on, intercultural media�on, and ul�mate survival of one of Canada’s most iconic Indigenous ceremonies.

UBC PRESS

Canada’s leading historical geographer traces how Canada’s geographical limita�ons have shaped the nature of its se�ler socie�es – from first contacts, to dispossession, to our current age of reconcilia�on.

Excludes SE Asia, Indian sc & ANZ

Excludes SE Asia, Indian sc & ANZ

Aboriginal Screen Printed Textiles from Australia’s Top End

Eagle Voice Remembers

An Authentic Tale of the Old Sioux World John G. Neihardt Foreword by Coralie Hughes, Introduction by Raymond J. DeMallie

Joanna Barrkman

September 2020 334pp 257 color illus., 2 maps 9780998044507 £48.00/ $60.00 HB

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PRESS

February 2021 324pp 9780803283985 £23.99/ $29.95 PB

Presents the work of contemporary Australian tex�le ar�sts working at five Aboriginal-owned art centers in the Northern Territory: Tiwi Design, Jilamara Arts and Cra�s Associa�on, Injalak Arts and Cra�s Aboriginal Corpora�on, Bábbarra Women’s Centre, and Merrepen Arts, Culture and Language.

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

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Adds new clarity through his annota�ons, thus introducing John G. Neihardt’s Eagle Voice Remembers to a new genera�on of readers and presen�ng a fresh understanding for fans of the original.


Herring and People of the North Pacific

Indigenous Textual Cultures

Sustaining a Keystone Species Thomas F. Thornton & Madonna L. Moss

Reading and Writing in the Age of Global Empire Edited by Tony Ballantyne, Lachy Paterson & Angela Wanhalla

January 2021 342pp 3 maps, 4 charts, 5 tables, 14 b&w illus. 9780295748290 £22.99/ $30.00 PB 9780295748283 £76.00/ $95.00 HB

September 2020 376pp 15 illus. 9781478010814 £22.99/ $28.95 PB 9781478009764 £87.00/ $104.95 HB

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PRESS

DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Combining ethnological, historical, archaeological, and poli�cal perspec�ves with compara�ve reference to other North Pacific cultures, this book traces fishery development in Southeast Alaska from precontact Indigenous rela�onships with herring to postcontact focus on herring products.

The contributors examine the ways in which indigenous peoples created textual cultures to navigate, shape, and contest empire, colonialism, and modernity.

Knowing Native Arts

Modernity through Letter Writing

Nancy Marie Mithlo

Cherokee and Seneca Political Representations in Response to Removal, 1830–1857 Claudia B. Haake

September 2020 272pp 12 color photos, 27 b&w photos, 4 color illus. 9781496202123 £27.99/ $34.95 HB

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

Brings Nancy Marie Mithlo’s Na�ve perspec�ve to understanding the significance of Indigenous arts in na�onal and global se�ngs. This contribu�on to the field of fine arts broadens the scope of discussions and offers insights that are o�en excluded from contemporary appraisals.

September 2020 312pp 8 illus., 4 maps, index 9781496215673 £54.00/ $65.00 HB

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

Examines the discursive prac�ces between Na�ve and non-Na�ve writers during the removal era. In this process of wri�en diplomacy, protest, and pe��oning, Na�ve writers developed strategies for nego�a�ng the policies of Indian Removal and advoca�ng for their own indigenous na�ons.

Picturing Indians

Russian Colonization of Alaska

Native Americans in Film, 19411960 Liza Black

Baranov’s Era, 1799–1818 Andrei Val’terovich Grinëv Translated by Richard L. Bland

October 2020 366pp 2 photos, 1 filmography, index 9780803296800 £54.00/ $65.00 HB

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

November 2020 306pp 6 photos, 6 illus., 1 map, 8 tables, 1 glossary, 2 appendixes, index 9781496222169 £58.00/ $70.00 HB

Cri�cally examines the inner workings of post–World War II American films and produc�on studios that cast American Indian extras and actors as Na�ve people, forcing them to come face to face with mainstream representa�ons of “Indianness.”

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS

The first comprehensive examina�on of the origin and evolu�on of the Russian state and Russians’ subsequent coloniza�on of Siberia and North America, based on research into poli�cal economy, history, and ethnography. 7


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