Red Scare: The State's Indigenous Terrorist (Volume 14) (American Studies Now: Critical Histories of the Present) by Joanne Barker


Red Scare: The State's Indigenous Terrorist (Volume 14) (American Studies Now: Critical Histories of the Present)
Title : Red Scare: The State's Indigenous Terrorist (Volume 14) (American Studies Now: Critical Histories of the Present)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0520303172
ISBN-10 : 9780520303171
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 192
Publication : Published December 3, 2021

How the rhetoric of terrorism has been used against high-profile movements to justify the oppression and suppression of Indigenous activists.
 
New Indigenous movements are gaining traction in North the Missing and Murdered Women and Idle No More movements in Canada, and the Native Lives Matter and NoDAPL movements in the United States. These do not represent new demands for social justice and treaty rights, which Indigenous groups have sought for centuries. But owing to the extraordinary visibility of contemporary activism, Indigenous people have been newly cast as terrorists—a designation that justifies severe measures of policing, exploitation, and violence.  Red Scare investigates the intersectional scope of these four movements and the broader context of the treatment of Indigenous social justice movements as threats to neoliberal and imperialist social orders.
 
In Red Scare , Joanne Barker shows how US and Canadian leaders leverage the fear-driven discourses of terrorism to allow for extreme responses to Indigenous activists, framing them as threats to social stability and national security. The alignment of Indigenous movements with broader struggles against sexual, police, and environmental violence puts them at the forefront of new intersectional solidarities in prominent ways. The activist-as-terrorist framing is cropping up everywhere, but the historical and political complexities of Indigenous movements and state responses are unique. Indigenous criticisms of state policy, resource extraction and contamination, intense surveillance, and neoliberal values are met with outsized and shocking measures of militarized policing, environmental harm, and sexual violence.  Red Scare provides students and readers with a concise and thorough survey of these movements and their links to broader organizing; the common threads of historical violence against Indigenous people; and the relevant alternatives we can find in Indigenous forms of governance and relationality.


Red Scare: The State's Indigenous Terrorist (Volume 14) (American Studies Now: Critical Histories of the Present) Reviews


  • Hollis

    Barker offers two figures of Indigenous subjectivity bound up with empire--the Murderable Indian and the Kinless Indian--and goes on to argue, in clear and moving prose, how the two figures are co-constitutive of settler processes that make Indigeneity work for the state. The monograph is slim, and I appreciate it all the more for that. Barker's contributions provide an original way to understand Indigenous Criminality as managed across the US and Canada. One of my favorite titles in recent memory.

  • Peter Carellini

    Uncompromising, uncomfortable, and commandingly blunt - as blood boiling as it is eye opening in carefully peeling back the layers of modern Western brutality against Natives, showing how little has changed from its onset. Joanne Barker strips back any literary prose or flowery sentiment to present a meticulous, angry case and reveal not just the why, but the how.