When the Other is Me: Native Resistance Discourse, 1850-1990

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Univ. of Manitoba Press, Mar 10, 2011 - Social Science - 232 pages

In this long-awaited book from one of the most recognized and respected scholars in Native Studies today, Emma LaRocque presents a powerful interdisciplinary study of the Native literary response to racist writing in the Canadian historical and literary record from 1850 to 1990. In When the Other is Me, LaRocque brings a metacritical approach to Native writing, situating it as resistance literature within and outside the postcolonial intellectual context. She outlines the overwhelming evidence of dehumanization in Canadian historical and literary writing, its effects on both popular culture and Canadian intellectual development, and Native and non-Native intellectual responses to it in light of the interlayered mix of romanticism, exaggeration of Native difference, and the continuing problem of internalization that challenges our understanding of the colonizer/colonized relationship.

 

Contents

Representation and Resistance
3
Reframing the Narratives
17
Dehumanization in Text
37
Currency and Social Effects of Dehumanization
59
Native Writers Resist Addressing Invasion
73
Native Writers ResistAddressing Dehumanization
95
An Intersection InternalizationDifference Criticism
119
Native Writers Reconstruct Pushing Paradigms
146
Decolonizing Postcolonials
161
Notes
171
Bibliography
194
Index
214
Copyright

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About the author (2011)

Dr. Emma LaRocque is a scholar, author, poet, social and literary critic, and a professor in the Department of Native Studies, University of Manitoba. She is the author of the groundbreaking book, Defeathering the Indian, and has also written extensively on contemporary Aboriginal literatures, Canadian historiography, and images of Aboriginal people in the media marketplace. She is a Plains Cree Metis from northeastern Alberta.

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