The book assembles essays by leading and emerging Indigenous and nonIndigenous scholars that demonstrate the foundational role of Indigeneity to intercultural communication scholarship. In doing so, the anthology stages a muchneeded intervention into theorizations of colonialism and structural inequalities.
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Santhosh Chandrashekar (Ph.D., University of New Mexico) is an Associate Professor in Communication Studies at the University of Denver. He lives and works on the unceded ancestral territories of the Arapahoe, Cheyenne, and other Indigenous nations. Originally from the Indian subcontinent, he lived in Albuquerque, New Mexico, for a decade where Indigenous people taught him about how settler colonialism continues to be a pressing reality in their lives and how they continue to thrive despite its effects. His research is focused on analyzing the entanglement of colonialism and race as they intersect with gender, sexuality, religion, and nationalism (among others); caste/ism; and Islamophobia. His work has appeared in the Journal of International and Intercultural Communication, Western Journal of Communication, and Cultural Studies↔Critical Methodologies, among others.
Bernadette Marie Calafell (Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) is a queer Chicana and hip-hop feminist living in the Pacific Northwest. She is a Professor of Latina/ox studies in the department of Indigenous, Race, and Ethnic Studies at the University of Oregon. Her research is focused on queer of color theory, Latina/o/x studies, women of color feminisms, performance studies, and monstrosity. She has co-edited six books and authored Latina/o Communication Studies: Theorizing Performance and Monstrosity, Performance, and Race in Contemporary Culture.
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Paperback. Condition: New. Intercultural communication scholars have done important work tracing how the legacies of colonialism continue to structure our world. Missing from this corpus, however, is sustained attention to (North American) Indigeneity and its repression under settler colonialism as foundationally linked to contemporary imperialisms and Euro-American domination.Unsettling Intercultural Communication brings together essays by Indigenous and non-Indigenous authors that make a strong case for centering Indigeneity and, by extension, settler-colonialism, as core analytics that can transform the field. Drawing upon the insights of critical Indigenous studies and settler-colonial studies, the contributors approach Indigeneity not as an additive but central concept that demands thorough engagement by intercultural communication scholars if we are to make sense of the unequal and violence-ridden world that we live in. In doing so, they open some of the core intercultural concepts to deeper examination. Seller Inventory # LU-9781433187179
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Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. Intercultural communication scholars have done important work tracing how the legacies of colonialism continue to structure our world. Missing from this corpus, however, is sustained attention to (North American) Indigeneity and its repression under settler colonialism as foundationally linked to contemporary imperialisms and Euro-American domination.Unsettling Intercultural Communication brings together essays by Indigenous and non-Indigenous authors that make a strong case for centering Indigeneity and, by extension, settler-colonialism, as core analytics that can transform the field. Drawing upon the insights of critical Indigenous studies and settler-colonial studies, the contributors approach Indigeneity not as an additive but central concept that demands thorough engagement by intercultural communication scholars if we are to make sense of the unequal and violence-ridden world that we live in. In doing so, they open some of the core intercultural concepts to deeper examination. The book assembles essays by leading and emerging Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars that demonstrate the foundational role of Indigeneity to intercultural communication scholarship. In doing so, the anthology stages a much-needed intervention into theorizations of colonialism and structural inequalities. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9781433187179
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paperback. Condition: Wie neu. Auflage: 1. 322 Seiten Tadelloses, neuwertiges Exemplar. - - - Table of Contents - List of Figures vii - Acknowledgments ix - Introduction: Indigeneity in the Position of the Unthought 1 - Santhosh Chandrashekar and Bernadette Calafell - Part 1: Reimagining Intercultural Communication - 1. "Before Cook" Time, Extinction Theories, and Native Land Without - Natives: Critical Intercultural Communication's Work to Dismantle - Settler Colonialism 31 - Rona Tamiko Halualani - 2. What Does Blackness Have to Do with Settler Colonialism Anyway? - The Decolonial Turn for Intercultural Communication 51 - Lisa B. Y. Calvente - 3. United States Rape Narrative: A Tool of Settler-Colonialism 73 - Cristy Dougherty - 4. "Weaving Together Futures Otherwise: A Decolonial Option, Settler - Colonialism, and Critical Intercultural Communication" 93 - Elise Homan and Romeo GarcIa - Part 2: Epistemologies of Resistance - 5. Settler Footprints and Footless Monuments: Tri-cultural Illusions - and Uncomplicated Triangles 115 - Jaelyn deMarIa - vi Table of Contents - . . -. l.l.' . . . . . . . . . ____ . . . ______________ _ ________ ___ __________________ _ _____ - 6. Austronesian Seafaring as Social Advocacy: Settler Colonialism - and Decolonization in Micronesia and Oceania 139 - Hunter H. Fine - 7. Whiteness and Neocolonialism in Aotearoa New Zealand: - Te Tiriti o Waitangi and Maori Resistance 165 - Mohan J. Dutta and Whanau - 8. Cultural Legacy of French-Algerian Settler Colonialism: - Challenging^ Vision du Maitre dans la Maison du Maitre 191 - Julia Khrebtan-Horhager - Part 3: Spanning the Personal to the Political - 9. Landbody: Decolonizing Intercultural Communication 221 - Aimee Carrillo Rowe - 10. In Loving Memory: A Chicana Feminist Reckoning with Grief - Complicity, and "Decolonization" 241 - Sara Baugh-Harris - 11. "Diez Tacosy una Diet Coke Pa' La Dicta" (Ten Tacos and a Diet - Coke for the Diet): A Cookbook to Reveal Colonial/Modern - Impulses to Over/Not/Undereat 259 - Luis M. Andrade - 12. Fanning the Flames: Monstrosity and (De)Colonial Unintelligibility 281 - B. Liahnna Stanley - Author Bios 295 - Index 301 105.167 - - - ISBN 9781433187179 Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 428. Seller Inventory # 1263268
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