03858nam 22007095 450 99665945990331620250423095240.09781772127904177212790610.1515/9781772127904(CKB)5860000000576289(MiAaPQ)EBC31093777(DE-B1597)680333(DE-B1597)9781772127904(Au-PeEL)EBL31093777(OCoLC)1518280914(EXLCZ)99586000000057628920250423h20252025 fg engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierIndigenous Healing as Paradox Re-Membering and Biopolitics in the Settler Colony /Krista Maxwell1st ed.Edmonton, Alberta : University of Alberta Press, [2025]20251 online resource (208 p.)9781772125740 1772125741 Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Artist Statement -- Introduction: Indigenous Re-Membering and Biopolitics in the Liberal Settler Colony -- 1 / Giizhiiganang and Anishinaabe Re-Membering, 1965–1980 -- 2 / Re-Membering and Biopolitics in Urban Ontario, 1973–1980s -- 3 / “Family Violence Is Weakening Our Nations”: Indigenous Women, Political Dismemberment, and Family Healing, 1972–1990 -- 4 / Biopolitical Tactics under Neoliberal Settler Colonialism: Healing as Public Discourse, 1990–2015 -- Conclusion: Towards an Indigenized Politics of Life -- Appendix: Methods and Sources -- Notes -- References -- Index -- About the AuthorIndigenous healing is a paradox in the liberal settler colony where efforts to foster well-being can simultaneously undermine distinct Indigenous societies. This book examines the prominence of “Indigenous healing” in Canadian public discourse through a historical and ethnographic lens. It focuses on late twentieth-century Indigenous social histories in Treaty 3 territory and cities in northern and southern Ontario to show practices of re-membering—drawing on traditional ways of being and knowing for social repair and collective rejuvenation—against the backdrop of the social dismemberment of Indigenous Peoples. Expansion of re-membering is often enabled by tactical engagements with the settler state which have fuelled an Indigenized biopolitics from below. Maxwell offers an analysis of the possibilities, tensions, and risks inherent to these biopolitical tactics. Informed by Indigenous feminist scholarship that emphasizes relationality, care, and the everyday, as well as the intimate workings of settler colonialism, this book aims to enrich critical conversations about reconciliation and resurgence politics and challenge their perceived dichotomy.SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & SocialbisacshAnishinaabeg.abuse.activism.addiction.alcohol.family.gender.healthcare.illness.kinship.medical anthropology.mental health.sobriety.social actors.social services.survival.survivance.violence.welfare state.well-being.women.SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social.Maxwell Krista, authttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut1800921DE-B1597DE-B1597BOOK996659459903316Indigenous Healing as Paradox4345891UNISA