Immagine dell'autore.

Andrea Smith (1) (1966–)

Autore di Conquest: Sexual Violence and American Indian Genocide

Per altri autori con il nome Andrea Smith, vedi la pagina di disambiguazione.

4+ opere 414 membri 5 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Andrea Smith is Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies and Media and Cultural Studies at the University of California, Riverside. She is the author of Native Americans and the Christian Right: The Gendered Politics of Unlikely Alliances and coeditor of Theorizing Native Studies, both also published mostra altro by Duke University Press. mostra meno
Fonte dell'immagine: Andrea Smith

Opere di Andrea Smith

Opere correlate

Color of Violence: The Incite! Anthology (2006) — Collaboratore — 284 copie
The Oxford Handbook of Feminist Theology (2011) — Collaboratore — 16 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1966
Sesso
female
Nazionalità
USA

Utenti

Recensioni

Really a 2.5, but for how heavily this is cited, I was pretty disappointed. It's got some interesting stuff and some stuff that really hasn't aged well (the whole vaccine thing looks a little awkward in our present day.) I will say Smith does a decent job of balancing her citational practice, and leading you to other places. Granted, I was hoping to use it for a specific reason, and it's not the book's fault it didn't lead me there, but I do hope folks move on to other books beyond this to cite and also to get information from.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
aijmiller | 4 altre recensioni | Jul 12, 2018 |
Argues that violence directed at Indians has been specifically sexual—Indians, especially women, seen as inherently dirty and therefore proper subjects of rape and extermination—and that putting the most disadvantaged groups at the center of any analysis and policy reforms is the key to avoiding using one axis of oppression to increase another, as she argues occurs when reformers try to use the criminal justice system to punish batterers and rapists in Indian communities. She also connects New Agey white interest in Indian ceremonies (not usually religions, but the trappings thereof) with sexual violence: it’s all about knowledge, and knowing the unwilling, and knowledge is of course a word for sex as well as information.

She admits that many proposals for dealing with offenders in the community are hampered by the fact that many in the community don’t see sexual violence as a big problem, and I was left uncertain what concrete steps she wanted to see, but that’s a standard problem with a big critique and the connections she makes are important ones. Reproductive “choice,” for example, looks very different if you’re from a group historically at risk of forced sterilization, losing your children to the state, and tremendous material difficulty if you do have children. Reproductive justice is a very different thing than choice, and she argues that Indian women should make strategic alliances on both sides of the abortion/contraception debate, and also demand to get something out of those alliances rather than accepting that their interests are somehow subsumed in those of the larger (white) group.
… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
rivkat | 4 altre recensioni | Sep 3, 2009 |
Awesome. This book absolutely lives up to its press.

First of all, I'm just desperately grateful to Smith for her language -- words, ideas, connections, concepts, frameworks. To be able to say why new-age religious appropriative crap is so harmful, or to put into words what feels so desperately cure-nearly-as-bad-as-the-ill about the domestic violence shelter model, or her neat expression of my frustration with the professionalization of everything I feel grassroots passion about... There is such exhilaration in finally having conceptual language for these things.

Plus the clear-voicedness that Smith puts into this book! I sometimes feel so frickin' immersed in the mainstream POV about the genocide of American Indians (Very Long Time Ago and Pretty Much Inevitable and anyway Everyone Meant Well And Did Their Very Best), that it's always such a relief to see someone writing about it without all the stupid minimizing lies.

(And would I be too much of an academic geek to be thrilled that there are copious endnotes? Every couple sentences, another superscript? Because I am full of joy about that. This book is a reference, an ongoing tool against the skeptics, not "merely" a set of thrilling conceptual frameworks.)

The penultimate chapter, "Anticolonial Responses to Gender Violence," is absolutely essential reading for everyone in the women's anti-violence movement (and is likely pretty darn useful in the anti-prison movement, and other anti-violence movements -- I only called out women's anti-violence by name because that's where my activist roots are, and thus I can see how neatly this chapter deals with the broken places). Smith meticulously documents the failures of both mainstream and alternative anti-violence models, and instead of viewing those failures as those unfortunate edge cases that you'll always have, she moves them to the center of her analysis: if your anti-violence model doesn't work for women of color, for poor women, for LGBTQI women, for disabled women, for mothers of disabled children, for undocumented immigrants, she asserts, then your model breaks in important -- not marginal! -- ways. Additionally, models that work well for the women who Smith centralizes, tend to simply work well. That is, even women who can afford to walk away from their communities benefit from not having to. It's a sweet bit of work, that chapter. Seriously, go read it. Even if you don't want to deal with the itemization of ongoing genocide in the earlier chapters -- and I can see why you might not want to -- do read chapter 7.
… (altro)
2 vota
Segnalato
sanguinity | 4 altre recensioni | Nov 17, 2008 |

Liste

Premi e riconoscimenti

Potrebbero anche piacerti

Autori correlati

Statistiche

Opere
4
Opere correlate
3
Utenti
414
Popolarità
#58,866
Voto
4.2
Recensioni
5
ISBN
106
Lingue
2

Grafici & Tabelle