Review of First Nations, First Thoughts: The Impact of Indigenous Thought in Canada edited by Annis May Timpson
This timely collection offers perceptive, thought-provoking perspectives on contemporary issues Indigenous communities face. Privatization, governance, language preservation, museums, public policy, and official knowledge are some of the topics the book tackles. Written by a range of seasoned and em...
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Format: | Text |
Language: | unknown |
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DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln
2011
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Online Access: | https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly/2639 https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/greatplainsquarterly/article/3657/viewcontent/Settee.pdf |
Summary: | This timely collection offers perceptive, thought-provoking perspectives on contemporary issues Indigenous communities face. Privatization, governance, language preservation, museums, public policy, and official knowledge are some of the topics the book tackles. Written by a range of seasoned and emerging scholars, First Nations, First Thoughts is organized into five subject areas (each containing two or three papers): challenging dominant discourses; oral histories; cultural representation; governance; and political self-determination. The title is a clever response to Thomas Flanagan's First Nations? Second Thoughts (2000). One of the articles rebuts the content of this infamous, rather anti-Indigenous-sovereignty book. Because Flanagan is consulted on issues of public policy by conservative-leaning governments, Indigenous peoples believe it important to counter his proposals. Throughout the book notions such as reclaim, revision, return, reconstitute, and resist come to mind. |
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