Urban Indigenous Youth Reframing Two-Spirit
Empowering Voices of Two-Spirit Indigenous Youth
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:16th Mar '21
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£135.00(9780367556938)
This insightful book explores the meanings of two-spirit identity through the voices of Indigenous youth, enriching conversations on queerness and community empowerment.
This book offers valuable insights from young trans, queer, and two-spirit Indigenous individuals in Toronto, who delve into the various meanings and interpretations of the term two-spirit. By exploring their experiences, the authors highlight the complexities and nuances of identity within their communities, ultimately enriching the discourse surrounding queerness and Indigeneity. The narratives presented challenge simplistic definitions and encourage readers to appreciate the diverse perspectives that exist within the two-spirit community.
Urban Indigenous Youth Reframing Two-Spirit traces the desires and refusals of these youth, emphasizing their agency in shaping their identities and communities. The work not only broadens critical conversations but also seeks to empower both Indigenous and non-Indigenous individuals, including educators and community members, to better support the self-determination of trans, queer, and two-spirit Indigenous youth. By fostering understanding and acceptance, the book aims to create a more inclusive environment for all.
Additionally, the inclusion of a research zine and community discussion guidelines illustrates the potential for transformative change when Indigenous people are given the opportunity to share and exchange knowledge. Laing's work serves as a reminder of the importance of creating safe spaces for dialogue, ultimately contributing to a greater understanding of the complexities surrounding two-spirit identities and the importance of community support.
Certain to be essential reading in the study of Indigenous gender and sexuality and community-centred scholarship, […] Laing brings readers into a community conversation that is at once profound, multidimensional, and provocative; she considers not just the histories of representation but also lived experiences as well as transformative visions of otherwise futures. This is a generous and generative study firmly rooted in honourable relations and ethical praxis; it stands as a model of what respectful and robust scholarship can be, and takes seriously the call to specificity in time, place, and relations. We have needed this book for a very long time.
—Daniel Heath Justice,Professor of Indigenous Literature and Expressive Culture, First Nations and Indigenous Studies/English, UBC, Canada.
Marie Laing invites Two Spirit, Trans and Queer young people to take up space–intellectually, politically, and otherwise–and to center themselves, their communities, and their own experiences and desires. Laing carefully traces Two Spirit histories and language, and ways that Indigenous young people in the city of Toronto are reimagining Two Spirit futures. By refusing the anthropological impulse to define, confine, and fold Indigenous Two Spirit, Trans, and Queer life into white neoliberal identity politics and the state, Laing’s work with Indigenous young people offers a convening of collaboration and care which resists colonial logics and practice. Laing asks readers to listen to the critical and transformative conversations that Two Spirit, Trans and Queer young people want to have, and in so doing, reiterates the brilliance and complexity of young peoples’ theorizing and activism. This life affirming and justice doing book should be essential reading across Indigenous, Feminist, Queer, Youth, and Community Studies. I wish I had this book as a young person. Reading it as an adult gave me hope and sense of place that I so longed for then. I have no doubt this book will save lives; urgently, it helps imagine the type of decolonial futures that Two Spirit, Trans and Queer folx want to live here and now–a life abundant in community, cultural connection, ceremony, and radical love.
—Jeffrey P. Ansloos, Assistant Professor of Indigenous Mental Health and Education, University of Toronto–Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, Canada
Certain to be essential reading in the study of Indigenous gender and sexuality and community-centred scholarship, Urban Indigenous Youth Reframing Two-Spirit is an impressively researched and compellingly argued consideration of how trans, queer, and two-spirit Indigenous people make meaning of terms like two-spirit in making and imagining community. Laing brings readers into a community conversation that is at once profound, multidimensional, and provocative; she considers not just the histories of representation but also lived experiences as well as transformative visions of otherwise futures. This is a generous and generative study firmly rooted in honourable relations and ethical praxis; it stands as a model of what respectful and robust scholarship can be, and takes seriously the call to specificity in time, place, and relations. We have needed this book for a very long time.
—Daniel Heath Justice, Professor of Indigenous Literature and Expressive Culture, First Nations and Indigenous Studies/English, University of British Columbia, Canada.
In Urban Indigenous Youth Reframing Two-Spirit,Marie Laing invites Two Spirit, Trans and Queer young people to take up space–intellectually, politically, and otherwise–and to center themselves, their communities, and their own experiences and desires. To do this, Laing carefully traces Two Spirit histories and language, and the ways that Indigenous young people in the city of Toronto are reimagining Two Spirit futures. By refusing the anthropological impulse to define, confine, and fold Indigenous Two Spirit, Trans, and Queer life into white neoliberal identity politics and indeed the state, Laing’s work with Indigenous young people offers a convening of collaboration and care which resists colonial logics and practice. Laing asks readers to listen deeply to the critical and transformative conversations that Two Spirit, Trans and Queer young people want to have, and often are already having, and in so doing, reiterates the brilliance and complexity of young peoples’ theorizing and activism. This life affirming and justice doing book should be essential reading across Indigenous, Feminist, Queer, Youth, and Community Studies. It offers a compelling account of Two Spirit young people’s reckoning with structural violence, and how they are creating vibrant futures for themselves and their communities which will long outlive colonialism. To be honest, I wish I had this book as a young person. Reading it as an adult gave me the hope and sense of place that I so longed for then. I have no doubt this book will save lives, but perhaps more urgently, it helps us to imagine the type of decolonial futures that Two Spirit, Trans and Queer folx want to live here and now–a life abundant in community, cultural connection, ceremony, and radical love.
—Jeffrey P. Ansloos, Assistant Professor of Indigenous Mental Health and Education, University of Toronto–Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, Canada
ISBN: 9780367556884
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 294g
200 pages