Publications

“To Be Made Colonized: Indigenous Peoples, the Archive, and US Boarding Schools”

In School Magazines: Archiving Encounters in the British Colonial World, edited by Catherine Sloan and Sneha Krishnan.

University of Massachusetts Press, Forthcoming.

Click for abstract

Off-reservation boarding schools mark a period of history that demonstrates additional methods of settler colonization and elimination beyond outright physical violence. National archives, as particular colonial formations, at once preserve that period by housing boarding school artifacts while simultaneously obviating the subjectivity of Indigenous peoples. Instead, these state institutions create and endlessly reinscribe Indigenous people as always already colonized subjects. Employing experience as a methodology, this chapter recounts research undertaken relative to a boarding school journal, using it as a conduit through which to comprehend the relationship between these institutions and settler colonialism. While integrating the journal in its argument, this chapter also refuses disclosure of the contents of the journal, instead centralizing the idea that boarding schools and archives exist as intimately related colonial institutions, shaping understandings of Native peoples within the US imaginary. Maintaining such a formation across time and space requires “evidence” and/or “proof” of the boarding school as an “authentic” Native experience. Consequently, these institutions are always already bound up within the logics of settler colonialism, while actively informing contemporary social discourse and political possibilities for Native peoples’ sovereignty and self-determination struggles. This chapter examines Indigenous peoples as artifacts produced within the archive to imagine alternative epistemologies in methodology and knowledge production that may work in service to sovereignty and self-determination struggles.

“A Settler Colonial Failure: Decolonial Promise Turned Decolonial Fear”

In How to Decolonize the Feminist
and Queer Studies Classroom
, edited by Atia Sattar.

NP: Press Publications, Forthcoming.

Click for abstract

“The Obligations of Our Ecological Relations: A Challenge for Land Acknowledgments”

Routledge, Forthcoming.

Click for abstract

Forthcoming.

“Resisting Colonial Education: Zitkala-Sa and Native Feminist Archival Refusal”

Click for abstract