A Veterans’ Talking Circle: Urban Indian Peoplehood and Re-Indigenizing Places

IF 0.3 3区 哲学 0 RELIGION Material Religion Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1080/17432200.2021.2015927
Natalie Avalos
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract While the boundaries of Indigeneity as a category are generally contested in Indian country, urban spaces provide opportunities for affinity and multiple expressions of Indigenous identity to coexist and even thrive. In Albuquerque, like many major cities, inter-tribal Indian identity centered on grassroots political activity increasingly recognizes Indigeneity as transnational and hemispheric, meaning that Indigenous peoples migrating from other parts of the Americas or around the world contribute to its greater Indigenous diversity (Ramirez 2007). Urban Indians in Albuquerque are composed of multiple peoples from diverse national and tribal identities, however, their points of convergence in the city, such as in ceremonial, sovereignty, and stewardship contexts enables a transnational expression of peoplehood to emerge. Indigenous sovereignty has been theorized as an articulation of peoplehood, defined by scholars as the persistence of a people who share a sacred history, religion, language, and land (Holm, Pearson, and Chavis 2003). In this article, I explore the ways urban Indian peoplehood emerges from the re-Indigenizing praxis of material life, such as talking circles, ceremony, and pottery-making, reflecting the generative culture making Native studies scholars call resurgence (Simpson 2011) and that moves away from essentialist and static definitions of Native identity that rely on blood quantum (Smith 2015).
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退伍军人的谈话圈:印度城市居民和重新本土化的地方
摘要虽然在印度国家,“愤怒”作为一个类别的界限普遍存在争议,但城市空间为原住民身份的亲和力和多种表达提供了共存甚至繁荣的机会。在阿尔伯克基,与许多大城市一样,以基层政治活动为中心的部落间印第安人身份越来越认识到Indigenity是跨国的和半球性的,这意味着从美洲其他地区或世界各地迁移的土著人民有助于其更大的土著多样性(Ramirez 2007)。阿尔伯克基的城市印第安人由来自不同民族和部落身份的多个民族组成,然而,他们在城市中的融合点,如仪式、主权和管理背景,使民族身份的跨国表达得以出现。土著主权被理论化为对民族身份的表达,学者们将其定义为拥有神圣历史、宗教、语言和土地的民族的持久性(Holm、Pearson和Chavis,2003年)。在这篇文章中,我探索了印度城市人民如何从物质生活的重新本土化实践中产生,如谈话圈、仪式和陶器制作,反映了使原住民研究学者称之为复兴的生成文化(Simpson 2011),并摆脱了依赖血量的原住民身份的本质主义和静态定义(Smith 2015)。
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来源期刊
Material Religion
Material Religion RELIGION-
CiteScore
1.00
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发文量
43
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