Roads, Mobility, and Violence in Indigenous Literature and Art from North America

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A01=Deena Rymhs
Accidental Women
activism
activist art
Alaska Highway
art
artists
Author_Deena Rymhs
authors
Calgary Stampede
Canada United States Border
Category=AGA
Category=DS
City View
confinement
Cruel Optimism
decolonial theory
Downtown Eastside
environmental
environmental racism
environmental violence
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Glenbow Museum
Hachivi Edgar Heap
Highway's Play
Highway’s Play
indigenous
indigenous communities
Indigenous mobility resistance analysis
Indigenous studies
Iva Toguri
Junker Cars
justice
Kent Monkman
Leanne Simpson
Lions Gate Bridge
literature
Louise Erdrich
Manitoulin Island
Marie Clements
Marilyn Dumont
Material Considerations
Midnight Runners
mobility
North America
racial
Rainy Lake
raods
Rez Sisters
Richard Van Camp
Road Narrative
Road Salt
Settler Colonial Institutions
Settler Colonial Logics
settler colonialism
sexual
Skid Road
spatial
spatial justice
Tomson Highway
traffic
Vancouver's Downtown Eastside
Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside
violence
visual art

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367149819
  • Weight: 399g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Jan 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Roads, Mobility, and Violence in Indigenous Literature and Art from North America explores mobility, spatialized violence, and geographies of activism in a diverse archive of literary and visual art by Indigenous authors and artists. Building on Raymond Williams’s observation that "traffic is not only a technique; it is a form of consciousness and a form of social relations," this book pulls into focus racial, sexual, and environmental violence localized around roads. Reading this archive of texts next to lived struggles over spatial justice, Rymhs argues that roads are spaces of complex signification. For many Indigenous communities, the road has not often been so open. Recent Indigenous writing and visual art explores this tension between mobility and confinement. Drawing primarily on the work of Marie Clements, Tomson Highway, Marilyn Dumont, Leanne Simpson, Richard Van Camp, Kent Monkman, and Louise Erdrich, this volume examines histories of uprooting and violence associated with roads. Along with exploring these fraught histories of mobility, this book emphasizes various ways in which Indigenous communities have transformed roads into sites of political resistance and social memory.

Deena Rymhs (Ph.D. Queen’s University, 2004) is an associate professor of English at the University of British Columbia. She is author of From the Iron House: Imprisonment in First Nations Writing (2008) along with numerous published essays on Indigenous literature, Indigenous visual art, and ecocriticism. Her research has been funded by two national SSHRC grants, and she was awarded a Sproul Fellowship at University of California, Berkeley in 2016-17.

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