Lumbee Pipelines : American Indian Movement in the Residue of Settler Colonialism

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Lumbee Pipelines : American Indian Movement in the Residue of Settler Colonialism

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 277 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781496232793
  • DDC分類 305.8973075609

Full Description

In Lumbee Pipelines David Shane Lowry (Lumbee) examines the historical and modern paths, or "pipelines," through which members of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina maintain Lumbee national identity, community practices, and tribal sovereignty. Through extensive ethnographic research and contextualization, Lowry explores these pipelines: the programs and traditions through which the Lumbee people engineer the settler-colonial conditions that define life in North Carolina and the United States as a whole.

Even as the Lumbee community depends on the economics, politics, and histories of settler colonialism, those realities at once threaten Lumbee life, freedom, and community. Despite that conflict, Lumbee people use these pipelines to protect their interests and to influence the world in the realms of public infrastructure and education, healthcare services, humanitarian networks, fossil fuel pipelines, environmental degradation, and artificial intelligence. Lowry paints an intimate portrait of how individual Lumbees define their identities and sense of being, revealing the disputes and affinities between Lumbee community members in various states of accepting and rejecting settler-colonial circumstances.

Lumbee Pipelines engages conversations about how, even as American Indian identities and communities are often erased amid the business of contemporary American life, Lumbee people have devised ways to empower and enrich themselves and other peoples by repurposing and evading the genocidal pressures that define settler-colonial society.
 

Contents

List of Illustrations
Theme Music
A Presidential Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction

1. Traffic(k)
2. Relief
3. Lumbee Pedagogy
4. Clinical Vignette
5. Dark Water
6. Artificially Indigenous
Pipeline Is Not a Metaphor (A Conclusion)

Appendix: Letter to Tribal Council
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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