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 |
Abstrak | 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. |
Entri Tambahan Nama Orang | |
001 Hak Akses (open/membership) | membership |
Kata Kunci | 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. |
ISSN | |
Tahun Terbit | 2020 |
No. Induk | eja-21-0694 |
Entri Sumber Data | Proquest - Crime Justice and Cyber Criminology |
Entri Utama Nama orang | Presley, Rachel |
Volume, Nomor, Tahun dan Hlm. | vol. 21, no. 7, p. 91-109 |
Entri Utama Nama Badan | |
Barcode | eja-21-0694 |
Subjek Topik | |
Judul Utama | Embodied Liminality and Gendered State Violence: Artivist Expressions in the MMIW Movement |
Kode Bahasa | eng |
Sumber Koleksi | Perpustakaan Nasional |
No. Panggil | No. Barkod | Ketersediaan |
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eja-21-0694 | eja-21-0694 | TERSEDIA |
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