Indigeneity, Nationhood, Racialization, and the U.S. Settler State: Why Political Status Matters to Native ‘Identity’ Formation

Author:

Gilio-Whitaker Dina1

Affiliation:

1. American Indian Studies, California State University San Marcos, 333 S. Twin Oaks Valley Rd., San Marcos, CA 92096, USA

Abstract

This essay is a chapter excerpted from my forthcoming book, Who Gets to be Indian: Ethnic Fraud and Other Difficult Conversations about Native American Identity The chapter shows the ways that Indianness, framed as Indian or Native American “identity”, is inseparable from state subjectivity based on the history of political relations between tribes and the United States. It argues that tribes’ political status and relationship to the state are central to how Native American identity is shaped, rejecting the understanding of Native identity as race-based. The term “Indigenous” is discussed as not being equivalent to “Native American” and is not a racial formation in international fora. Social changes during the twentieth century brought new ways to diffuse and co-opt Nativeness through disaggregating it from political status and reinforcing racialization with the rise in urban pan-Indianism and neo-tribalism. Distinguishing Nativeness as political status from racialization is critical given ongoing attacks on tribal sovereignty in Supreme Court challenges based on alleged violations to the equal protection principle. Native American “identity” is inextricable from tribal nationhood and state formation, and thus cannot simply be dismissed as a colonial construct.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference58 articles.

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2. Blansett, Kent (2018). A Journey to Freedom: Richard Oakes, Alcatraz, and the Red Power Movement, Yale University Press.

3. Brown, Alleen (2023, March 14). Inside the Oil Industry’s Fight to Roll Back Tribal Sovereignty After Supreme Court Decision. The Intercept, Available online: https://theintercept.com/2021/03/10/oklahoma-mcgirt-oil-industry-kevin-stitt/.

4. Brown, Katrina (2023, July 04). Two Lawswuits Could Threaten the Sovereignty of Indigenous Nations. Crosscut.com. Available online: https://crosscut.com/equity/2023/01/two-lawsuits-could-threaten-sovereignty-indigenous-nations.

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