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Forthcoming in Cultural Studies Review
September 2009
Critical Indigenous Theory
Edited by John Frow and Katrina Schlunke
with co-editor Aileen Moreton-Robinson
Contents
Critical Indigenous Theory
Jodi A. Byrd, ‘“In the City of Blinding Lights”: Indigeneity, Cultural Studies, and the Errants of Colonial Nostalgia’
Sonja Kurtzer, ‘When Something New Is Just More of the Same: Revealing the White Aborigine and Other Myths of White Belonging in Kim Mahood’s Craft for a Dry Lake’
Bronwyn Fredericks, ‘“There is Nothing that Identifies Me to that Place”: Indigenous Women’s Perceptions of Health Spaces and Places’
Irene Watson, ‘In Humanitarian Intervention (or Crusade) What is Saved or Rescued and at What Cost?’
Aileen Moreton-Robinson, ‘Imagining the Good Indigenous Citizen: Race War and the Pathology of Patriarchal White Sovereignty’
Chris Andersen, ‘Indigenous Studies: From Difference to Density’
Brendan Hokowhitu, ‘Indigenous Existentialism and the Body’
Robert Warrior, ‘Native American Scholarship and the Transnational Turn’
Essays
Maria Angel, ‘Seeing Things: Image and Affect’
Nikos Papastergiadis, ‘Wog Zombie: The De- and Re-Humanisation of Migrants, from Mad Dogs to Cyborgs’
Book reviews
Joan Kirkby on Jacques Derrida, Learning to Live Finally: The Last Interview and Linnell Secomb, Philosophy and Love: From Plato to Popular Culture
Julie Marcus on Jon Altman and Melinda Hinkson (eds), Coercive Reconciliation: Stabilise, Normalise, Exit Aboriginal Australia
Holly Randell-Moon on William E. Connolly, Capitalism and Christianity, American Style
Jason Tuckwell onAnna Hickey-Moody and Peta Malins (eds), Deleuzian Encounters: Studies in Contemporary Social Issues
Vicki Grieves on Martin Nakata, Disciplining the Savages, Savaging the Disciplines
Anna Hickey-Moody on Ato Quayson, Aesthetic Nervousness: Disability and the Crisis of Representation
You can pre order a copy via email csreview@unimelb.edu.au
(RRP $29.95).