Settler Common Sense: Queerness and Everyday Colonialism in the American Renaissance

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Product Details
Price
$33.60
Publisher
University of Minnesota Press
Publish Date
Pages
320
Dimensions
5.61 X 8.44 X 0.77 inches | 0.81 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780816690602

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About the Author

Mark Rifkin is associate professor of English and women's studies at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. He is the author of several books, including When Did Indians Become Straight?Kinship, the History of Sexuality, and Native Sovereignty and The Erotics of Sovereignty: Queer Native Writing in the Era of Self-Determination (Minnesota, 2012).

Reviews
"A sophisticated and rigorous interdisciplinary work, Settler Common Sense is a wonderful, unsettling contribution to American literary studies, native studies, and queer studies." --Beth Piatote, University of California, Berkeley

"Mark Rifkin adds to his brilliant collection of work on settler colonialism by challenging the scholarly tendency to frame settler colonialism as a consistent, already made structure or set of logics that people today simply inhabit."--Andrea Smith

"A useful starting point for further analysis, laying the groundwork for future scholars to explore how a variety of cultural products--if subtly--encouraged the dispossession of Native Americans during one of the US's most important periods of physical growth and ideological development."--CHOICE

"Rifkin presents clear, fascinating, and focused readings of texts that offer new questions for how queer studies tools can be used in connection with ethics (queer and Indigenous) to read foundational literary texts."--American Literature

"Rifkin has opened a necessary dialogue."--The Year's Work in English Studies

"Offers an important reminder of the expropriation and erasure on which nineteenth-century American culture was built, even after 'Indians' have ostensibly vanished from areas like New England and New York."--Modern Philology