No Ordinary Time: Indigenous Dispossession and Slavery Unwilling to Die

The contemporary coalescence of Indigenous and Black peoples as aggrieved, insurgent, and mobilized polities reflects a shared recognition of more than the private, personal, and parochial concerns of members of those groups. The enduring consequences of Indigenous dispossession and what US jurist W...

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Published in:Kalfou
Main Author: Lipsitz, George
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Temple University Press 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tupjournals.temple.edu/index.php/kalfou/article/view/209
https://doi.org/10.15367/kf.v5i2.209
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spelling fttempleunivojs:oai:tupjournals-temple:article/209 2023-05-15T16:16:44+02:00 No Ordinary Time: Indigenous Dispossession and Slavery Unwilling to Die Lipsitz, George 2018-11-16 application/pdf https://tupjournals.temple.edu/index.php/kalfou/article/view/209 https://doi.org/10.15367/kf.v5i2.209 eng eng Temple University Press https://tupjournals.temple.edu/index.php/kalfou/article/view/209/pdf https://tupjournals.temple.edu/index.php/kalfou/article/view/209 doi:10.15367/kf.v5i2.209 Copyright (c) 2018 Kalfou Kalfou; Vol. 5 No. 2 (2018): Kalfou: A Journal of Comparative and Relational Ethnic Studies 2372-0751 2151-4712 10.15367/kf.v5i2 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2018 fttempleunivojs https://doi.org/10.15367/kf.v5i2.209 https://doi.org/10.15367/kf.v5i2 2022-09-29T13:54:06Z The contemporary coalescence of Indigenous and Black peoples as aggrieved, insurgent, and mobilized polities reflects a shared recognition of more than the private, personal, and parochial concerns of members of those groups. The enduring consequences of Indigenous dispossession and what US jurist William O. Douglas aptly described in the 1960s as “the spectacle of slavery unwilling to die” are felt harshly and directly by First Nations and Afro-diasporic people around the globe, but they harm everyone. Racialized capitalism treats the planet and most of its people as mere objects to be manipulated in the pursuit of profits and power. As the system resorts to ever more desperate and dangerous forms of domination and exploitation, aggrieved communities of color see first the very worst that it has to offer. What happens to them today will happen elsewhere tomorrow. Their insurgencies are not pleas to be granted full recognition and rights within the world as it now exists but rather insistent struggles to transform radically a society that they rightly perceive to be decadent and dying. The turmoil of our time is evidence of chickens coming home to roost, of the ways in which the patterns of the past shape the contours of both peril and possibility in the present, and of the need for the world to be at last responsible and accountable for the cumulative costs of displacement, dispossession, slavery, and segregation. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations Temple University Press Journals Kalfou 5 2
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description The contemporary coalescence of Indigenous and Black peoples as aggrieved, insurgent, and mobilized polities reflects a shared recognition of more than the private, personal, and parochial concerns of members of those groups. The enduring consequences of Indigenous dispossession and what US jurist William O. Douglas aptly described in the 1960s as “the spectacle of slavery unwilling to die” are felt harshly and directly by First Nations and Afro-diasporic people around the globe, but they harm everyone. Racialized capitalism treats the planet and most of its people as mere objects to be manipulated in the pursuit of profits and power. As the system resorts to ever more desperate and dangerous forms of domination and exploitation, aggrieved communities of color see first the very worst that it has to offer. What happens to them today will happen elsewhere tomorrow. Their insurgencies are not pleas to be granted full recognition and rights within the world as it now exists but rather insistent struggles to transform radically a society that they rightly perceive to be decadent and dying. The turmoil of our time is evidence of chickens coming home to roost, of the ways in which the patterns of the past shape the contours of both peril and possibility in the present, and of the need for the world to be at last responsible and accountable for the cumulative costs of displacement, dispossession, slavery, and segregation.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lipsitz, George
spellingShingle Lipsitz, George
No Ordinary Time: Indigenous Dispossession and Slavery Unwilling to Die
author_facet Lipsitz, George
author_sort Lipsitz, George
title No Ordinary Time: Indigenous Dispossession and Slavery Unwilling to Die
title_short No Ordinary Time: Indigenous Dispossession and Slavery Unwilling to Die
title_full No Ordinary Time: Indigenous Dispossession and Slavery Unwilling to Die
title_fullStr No Ordinary Time: Indigenous Dispossession and Slavery Unwilling to Die
title_full_unstemmed No Ordinary Time: Indigenous Dispossession and Slavery Unwilling to Die
title_sort no ordinary time: indigenous dispossession and slavery unwilling to die
publisher Temple University Press
publishDate 2018
url https://tupjournals.temple.edu/index.php/kalfou/article/view/209
https://doi.org/10.15367/kf.v5i2.209
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Kalfou; Vol. 5 No. 2 (2018): Kalfou: A Journal of Comparative and Relational Ethnic Studies
2372-0751
2151-4712
10.15367/kf.v5i2
op_relation https://tupjournals.temple.edu/index.php/kalfou/article/view/209/pdf
https://tupjournals.temple.edu/index.php/kalfou/article/view/209
doi:10.15367/kf.v5i2.209
op_rights Copyright (c) 2018 Kalfou
op_doi https://doi.org/10.15367/kf.v5i2.209
https://doi.org/10.15367/kf.v5i2
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