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Decanonizing and decolonizing the anthropology of law, "Sister Parks:…
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"Sister Parks: North American Coloniality and the Monarch Butterfly," Blogpost (Columba González-Duarte, 2022)
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Suggested areas that this blogpost discusses:
- Multispecies ethnography ("more-than-human worlds")
- Coloniality
- Legal treaties and their breakage
- Creation of borders
- Forced migration and displacement
- Extractive industries
- US Empire
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“#OurLivesMatter: Mapping an Abolitionist Anthropology” in Progressive Dystopia: Abolition, Antiblackness, and Schooling in San Francisco
(Savannah Shange, 2019)
- Both works cite Katherine McKittrick's idea of racialized constructions of Blackness as placeless --- "as without history, family, human value, or connection to place (Clarke). Shange expands this to mean perpetually "out of place and out of time" (14)
- Both works are situated in the "afterlives of slavery" at progressive educational institutions
- Centers the role of teaching in reproducing structural violence
- Carceral progressivism as the "'cunning' of multiracial liberalism, whereby the acknowledgement of systemic injustice serves as an alibi for the retrenchment of that very system" (14)
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Whereas: Poems
(Layli Long Soldier, 2017)
- Reading theory as poetry, poetry as theory
- Breaking conventional academic norms of writing through anthropology
- Storytelling: arguments made through deeply personal stories about family, loss, and identity
- Failure of empty apology
- Role of ecology (lands, waters, winds) in shaping relations between humans
Decolonizing Anthropology: Moving Further toward an Anthropology for Liberation (Faye Harrison, 1991)
- Friction between liberation and freedom
- Recognizing the value in Indigenous modes of knowledge
- Displacing current US-centered institutional modes of "scientific" knowledge production
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