学位论文详细信息
Indigenous Detroit: indigeneity, modernity, and racial and gender formation in a modern American city, 1871-2000
history;Indigenous studies;urban history;racial formation;urban studies
Mays, Kyle T
关键词: history;    Indigenous studies;    urban history;    racial formation;    urban studies;   
Others  :  https://www.ideals.illinois.edu/bitstream/handle/2142/78653/MAYS-DISSERTATION-2015.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
美国|英语
来源: The Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship
PDF
【 摘 要 】

This dissertation traces the role of indigeneity in the formation of modern Detroit and the impact of urban culture on the reemergence of Indigenous people in that same location at the end of the 20th century. Covering more than a hundred years of urban Indigenous history between the nexus of urban history and Indigenous studies, Indigenous Detroit examines, first, non-Natives elites, and later, Native people, and how both deployed gendered and racialized versions of indigeneity. In both instances, “indigenous” identities carried racial and gendered meanings that helped to animate their appeal. Using local newspapers, government documents, and oral histories, this dissertation demonstrates how non-Indians used images of indigeneity to erase Native people from Detroit’s history. Indigenous people reasserted their presence in the Motor City, challenging longstanding definitions of indigeneity. In the first two chapters, I argue that, in a quest to bolster both white masculinity and Detroit’s urban standing, elite white men both memorialized and erased Detroit’s indigenous past. However, as I argue in chapters three and four, Indigenus residents such as Dakota Charles Eastman and women like my great-grandmother Esther Shawboose Mays carved out spaces in Detroit to reinvigorate and redefine indigeneity through the creation of Indigenous cultural and educational institutions in a city now predicated on blackness, whiteness, and labor.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
Indigenous Detroit: indigeneity, modernity, and racial and gender formation in a modern American city, 1871-2000 17828KB PDF download
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:28次 浏览次数:33次