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Embodied Liminality and Gendered State Violence: Artivist Expressions in the MMIW Movement

No. Panggil : eja-21-0694
Nama Orang : Presley, Rachel
Penerbitan : [Place of publication not identified] : Proquest - Crime Justice and Cyber Criminology, 2020
AbstrakThis article examines four multimedia artivist artefacts at the nexus of the missing and murdered Indigenous womens (MMIW) crisis. I position artivism as a decolonial methodology that radically alters our attunement to embodied aesthetics, contending that feminist artivists employ a radical imagination to liberate the body/body politic. Decoloniality must be an enacted praxis, and for many Indigenous feminists, creative and artistic practices provide a transformative pathway towards making and living out ones indigeneity as knowledge and tradition-bearers. Each of the four exhibits illustrate the ways in which settler politics are narrated and resisted through and by the Indigenous body. My analysis illuminates what I theorize as an embodied liminality allied to Anzaldúas (1987) Borderlands and Bhabhas (2004) Third Space. By articulating both feminist and decolonial forms of liminality, I explore the radical dimensions of artivism and the strategic subjugation of the liminals in-between threshold in which Indigenous women are traditionally relegated as monstrous Others. Using feminist artivism as a pathway to decolonization renders indigeneity clearly visible, such that the once-shadowy forms of its liminality are now simultaneously the protagonist and antagonist of the settler state. Building a decolonial movement against the MMIW crisis must begin with the recognition of the Indigenous body across fluid boundaries of radical resistance and critical vocabularies of aesthetic deviance.
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Kata KunciThis article examines four multimedia artivist artefacts at the nexus of the missing and murdered Indigenous womens (MMIW) crisis. I position artivism as a decolonial methodology that radically alters our attunement to embodied aesthetics, contending that feminist artivists employ a radical imagination to liberate the body/body politic. Decoloniality must be an enacted praxis, and for many Indigenous feminists, creative and artistic practices provide a transformative pathway towards making and living out ones indigeneity as knowledge and tradition-bearers. Each of the four exhibits illustrate the ways in which settler politics are narrated and resisted through and by the Indigenous body. My analysis illuminates what I theorize as an embodied liminality allied to Anzaldúas (1987) Borderlands and Bhabhas (2004) Third Space. By articulating both feminist and decolonial forms of liminality, I explore the radical dimensions of artivism and the strategic subjugation of the liminals in-between threshold in which Indigenous women are traditionally relegated as monstrous Others. Using feminist artivism as a pathway to decolonization renders indigeneity clearly visible, such that the once-shadowy forms of its liminality are now simultaneously the protagonist and antagonist of the settler state. Building a decolonial movement against the MMIW crisis must begin with the recognition of the Indigenous body across fluid boundaries of radical resistance and critical vocabularies of aesthetic deviance.
ISSN
Tahun Terbit2020
No. Indukeja-21-0694
Entri Sumber DataProquest - Crime Justice and Cyber Criminology
Entri Utama Nama orangPresley, Rachel
Volume, Nomor, Tahun dan Hlm.vol. 21, no. 7, p. 91-109
Entri Utama Nama Badan
Barcodeeja-21-0694
Subjek Topik
Judul UtamaEmbodied Liminality and Gendered State Violence: Artivist Expressions in the MMIW Movement
Kode Bahasaeng
Sumber KoleksiPerpustakaan Nasional
No. Panggil No. Barkod Ketersediaan
eja-21-0694 eja-21-0694 TERSEDIA
 Embodied_Liminality_and_Gender.pdf
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This article examines four multimedia artivist artefacts at the nexus of the missing and murdered Indigenous womens (MMIW) crisis. I position artivism as a decolonial methodology that radically alters our attunement to embodied aesthetics, contending that feminist artivists employ a radical imagination to liberate the body/body politic. Decoloniality must be an enacted praxis, and for many Indigenous feminists, creative and artistic practices provide a transformative pathway towards making and living out ones indigeneity as knowledge and tradition-bearers. Each of the four exhibits illustrate the ways in which settler politics are narrated and resisted through and by the Indigenous body. My analysis illuminates what I theorize as an embodied liminality allied to Anzaldúas (1987) Borderlands and Bhabhas (2004) Third Space. By articulating both feminist and decolonial forms of liminality, I explore the radical dimensions of artivism and the strategic subjugation of the liminals in-between threshold in which Indigenous women are traditionally relegated as monstrous Others. Using feminist artivism as a pathway to decolonization renders indigeneity clearly visible, such that the once-shadowy forms of its liminality are now simultaneously the protagonist and antagonist of the settler state. Building a decolonial movement against the MMIW crisis must begin with the recognition of the Indigenous body across fluid boundaries of radical resistance and critical vocabularies of aesthetic deviance.
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