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Indigeneity, Colonialism, And Literary Studies: A

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  • Title: Indigeneity, Colonialism, And Literary Studies: A "Transdisciplinary, Oppositional Politics of Reading".
  • Author : English Studies in Canada
  • Release Date : January 01, 2004
  • Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines,Books,Professional & Technical,Education,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 207 KB

Description

WHILE LEN FINDLAY S EXHORTATION, "ALWAYS INDIGENIZE" could usefully apply to all social relations throughout the Americas, he is particularly, concerned in this essay with the ways the university replicates and reinforces the "aggravated inequality" of indigenous peoples. The complicity of the university in colonialism takes a broad range of forms, including the Eurocentric biases of academic knowledge and the devaluation of indigenous perspectives in the curriculum as well as hiring and admissions processes that favour white applicants. While these problems affect all communities of color to varying degrees, in us institutions, the vantage point from which I write, they are particularly acute for indigenous peoples, who remain the most underrepresented group in the academy. Even ethnic studies programs dedicated to interrogating social power and racial inequalities have, for the most part, ignored or neglected Native America: many such programs do not include indigenous studies as part of the curriculum, at least not in any substantial way, while scholars working in adjacent fields--African American, Chicano/Latino, Asian American, postcolonial, and gender studies--rarely have even a rudimentary knowledge of indigenous scholarship and issues. This is true despite, or perhaps because of, the fact that, in Findlay's words, there is nothing hors-Indigene in the Americas, an acknowledgement that necessitates the difficult task of rethinking the histories and interrelationships of communities of color. In the us context, Findlay's exhortation thus points to a badly needed corrective both in dominant academic culture as well as in emerging fields dedicated to challenging the hegemomc order. For Findlay, this corrective necessitates structural changes to transform the university into a place that supports indigenous self-determination and self-representation, a process in which, Audre Lorde's contention notwithstanding, "the master's most important tools--like the domestic and international division of labour--can be used to 'dismantle the master's house; though [crucially] not if they are the only tools used and if they within dominant patterns of ownership and means of production' (310). These changes entail inclusive curricular, hiring, and admissions practices throughout the institution. More specific to literary studies, they require a new hermeneutic-in Findlay's terms, a "transdisciplinary, oppositional politics of reading" (318)-to interrogate and challenge, rather than support, social inequalities. Indeed, Findlay's essay itself exemplifies such a practice because it adapts deconstructive and Marxist theories for indigenous purposes in a way that also underscores and counters their Eurocentric foundations. Findlay's approach thus provides a model for an oppositional politics of reading that is critical as well as constructive and that contributes to a broader anticolonial project. In what follows, I shall look more closely at Findlay's adaptation of Jameson to consider, however briefly, what tools Jameson's conception of political criticism might provide for such a hermeneutic.


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