Between powerlessness and protest: Indigenous men and masculinities in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis/St. Paul and the emergence of the American Indian Movement

IF 1.1 Q2 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Matthias Voigt
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Abstract

ABSTRACT The Red Power era (1969-1978), the most pivotal time for Indigenous people in the twentieth century, is commonly associated with a fundamental restructuring of Indigenous-settler colonial relations and a major cultural renewal of self and society across Indian Country. This article examines the social formation of those Indigenous men and masculinities who instigated that profound change and became politically active, questioning domestic colonialism and challenging their subaltern status vis-à-vis dominant U.S. society. More specifically, this article explores the shared experiences of Indigenous male activists within the American Indian Movement (AIM) during its early beginnings between 1968 through mid-1972. AIM (1968–1978) originated in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis/St-Paul and rose to become the most significant player in Indigenous protest politics at its time. Indigenous men in AIM shared key experiences with settler colonial institutions and the forces of modernity (boarding schools, military service, prisons, the urban experience) that affected their male identities in multiple, complex, and contradictory ways. Western-centric concepts of race, gender, and nation have consistently worked towards the marginalization and oppression of the Indigenous ‘other' -commonly through the imposition of colonial standards as a ‘civilizing force.' This article argues that the inculcation of Indigenous men with hegemonic ideals, together with experiences of emasculation, have led to an unintended outcome, namely the emergence of a ‘protest masculinity.' This ‘protest masculinity’ arose as a result of and in reaction to assimilationist policies. Paradoxically, Indigenous male activists contested dominant concepts of masculinity, yet at the same time conformed to the very cultural ideals they struggled against. This article offers an understanding of how gender and race bias intersect to disadvantage Indigenous men and how this in turn constitutes a powerful catalyst for change.
在无能为力和抗议之间:明尼阿波利斯/圣路易斯市双城的土著男子和男子气概。保罗和美洲印第安人运动的兴起
红色力量时代(1969-1978)是20世纪原住民最关键的时期,通常与原住民与殖民关系的根本重构以及整个印第安国家自我和社会的重大文化更新有关。这篇文章考察了这些土著男子和男性的社会形成,他们促成了深刻的变革,并在政治上变得活跃,质疑国内殖民主义,挑战他们在-à-vis占主导地位的美国社会中的次等地位。更具体地说,本文探讨了美洲印第安人运动(AIM)在1968年至1972年中期早期的共同经历。AIM(1968-1978)起源于双子城明尼阿波利斯/圣保罗,并成长为当时土著抗议政治中最重要的参与者。AIM的土著男性与殖民机构和现代力量(寄宿学校、兵役、监狱、城市经验)分享了重要的经历,这些经历以多种、复杂和矛盾的方式影响着他们的男性身份。以西方为中心的种族、性别和国家概念一直致力于边缘化和压迫土著“他者”——通常是通过将殖民标准作为一种“文明力量”强加于人。这篇文章认为,对土著男性霸权理想的灌输,加上被阉割的经历,导致了一个意想不到的结果,即“抗议男子气概”的出现。这种“抗议男子气概”是同化主义政策的结果和反应。矛盾的是,土著男性积极分子挑战男性气概的主流概念,但同时又符合他们所反对的文化理想。这篇文章提供了对性别和种族偏见如何交织在一起使土著男性处于不利地位的理解,以及这反过来如何构成变革的强大催化剂。
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来源期刊
Settler Colonial Studies
Settler Colonial Studies SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
11.10%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: The journal aims to establish settler colonial studies as a distinct field of scholarly research. Scholars and students will find and contribute to historically-oriented research and analyses covering contemporary issues. We also aim to present multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary research, involving areas like history, law, genocide studies, indigenous, colonial and postcolonial studies, anthropology, historical geography, economics, politics, sociology, international relations, political science, literary criticism, cultural and gender studies and philosophy.
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