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7. In the Present Tense of Indigenous Politics: Lessons Learned from Hawai‘i

  • Monisha Das Gupta
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Disciplinary Futures
This chapter is in the book Disciplinary Futures
© 2023 New York University Press, New York, USA

© 2023 New York University Press, New York, USA

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Introduction: How We Got Here, Where We’d Like to Go Now 1
  4. Part I. Empire and Racial Capitalism
  5. 1. Critical Immigration and Refugee Studies: An Interdisciplinary Approach 21
  6. 2. Between a War and a Pandemic: Yemeni American Corner Stores during COVID 42
  7. 3. Precarity and Privilege: Racial Capitalism, Immigration Law, and Immigrants’ Academic Pursuits 62
  8. 4. Education for Community Empowerment: Layered Histories of Colonization and the Ongoing Movement for Decolonization in Guåhan’s Social Studies Curriculum 82
  9. Part II. Settler Colonialism and Indigenous Studies
  10. 5. Crossing the Lines: Sociology, Indigenous Nations, and American Studies 105
  11. 6. Unsettling the Spectacle of Settler Sovereignty: Democracy and Indigenous Justice 126
  12. 7. In the Present Tense of Indigenous Politics: Lessons Learned from Hawai‘i 141
  13. 8. A Healing Methodology: An Indigenous Research Process 160
  14. Part III Race/Racism, Intersectionality, and White Supremacy
  15. 9. The Souls of Sociology: Imaginative Sociology, Cultural Studies, and the Post/colonial Disruption 183
  16. 10. A Queer of Color Critique for Sociology: The Mutual Constitution of Race and Sexuality 203
  17. 11. Cripping the Model Minority Mother: Race, Disability, and Reproductive Exclusion in Asian American Families 221
  18. 12. “Can’t We All Just Get Along?” Public Opinion on Race in Los Angeles Twenty-Five Years after Rodney King 242
  19. Part IV. New Epistemologies and Methodologies
  20. 13. Mana as Sacred Space: A Talanoa of Tongan American College Students in a Pacific Studies Learning Community Classroom 269
  21. 14. Unsettling the Settler Colonial Triptych: Visioning AlterNative Futures with Octavia E. Butler’s Wild Seed 288
  22. 15. Creating Intuitively: The Art and Flow of Intuitive Social Science 302
  23. 16. On the Margins of Sociology and Grounded in Chicana/o Latina/o Studies: Cross-Generational Reflections on (Un)Disciplining 325
  24. Acknowledgments 347
  25. About the Contributors 349
  26. About the Editors 353
  27. Index 355
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