So I largely stopped posting on Facebook and Twitter for a variety of reasons, and I especially ceased posting anything related to my research. So I am going to change that here, partially in the hopes it will help me devote more time to research again, returning to that unique affective space where one gets lost in and excited about ideas again.
To that end, let me begin by highlighting a book I keep returning to in mulitiple contexts, Nick Estes's Our Country is the Future (link posted below). Parts of my second book and an essay for another project intersect with indigenous studies, and Estes keeps challenging me to move away from settler epistomolgies through his study of indigenous resistence.
In Estes's book, Standing Rock in 2016 flows into a long history of colonialism and resistence that is less about perserving a clacificed past and more about imagining new futures. Much more could be said, but I'll let him say it:
https://www.versobooks.com/books/2953-our-history-is-the-future
#c19studies