Indigenous feminist bloggers weave an intersectional, rhetorical story that lances the core of American popular culture and misinformed imaginations. The Native American women bloggers introduced in this essay are unknown to most non-Native Americans, most rhetoric scholars, and most feminists, but should be on our radar because of their refusal to be constrained by colonialist binaries, single rhetorical forms, or imposed boundedness to the margins. These Indigenous feminists practice in the digital space to reinforce and reclaim rhetorical sovereignty as an outcome for themselves and their communities. Once the weaving is complete, the resultant warmth of rhetorical sovereignty provides some protection from the cold colonial stories of er...
My dissertation introduced a Native feminist reading methodology as a transhistorical methodology th...
As settler colonialism has forcibly constricted vast expanses of Indigenous lands, criss-crossing th...
In The Medium Is the Movement: The Internet’s Influence on Feminist Rhetorical Strategies, I assert ...
Indigenous feminist bloggers weave an intersectional, rhetorical story that lances the core of Ameri...
At the turn of the twenty-first century, the feminist blogosphere emerged as a crucial site for comm...
As more and more digital publics emerge as generative sites for cross-cultural communication and soc...
Ancient female-centered Native American myths reveal pre-colonial attitudes about gender, gender rol...
This dissertation asserts that existing definitions of gender and understandings of sexuality need t...
As more and more digital publics emerge as generative sites for cross-cultural communication and soc...
My research examines indigenous perspectives on representation and sovereignty to explore media comp...
An Indigenous feminist approach to Native literature reveals the ways in which Native authors attemp...
[eng] Today’s feminism’s claims of intersectionality are questionable. Although more women are start...
In their book Introduction to Feminist Thought and Action, Menoukha Robin Case and Allison V. Craig ...
Feminist Maya women have been contesting the narrative imposed by the state, social prejudices and m...
Patriarchal and colonial structures have dominated North American society for centuries, consistentl...
My dissertation introduced a Native feminist reading methodology as a transhistorical methodology th...
As settler colonialism has forcibly constricted vast expanses of Indigenous lands, criss-crossing th...
In The Medium Is the Movement: The Internet’s Influence on Feminist Rhetorical Strategies, I assert ...
Indigenous feminist bloggers weave an intersectional, rhetorical story that lances the core of Ameri...
At the turn of the twenty-first century, the feminist blogosphere emerged as a crucial site for comm...
As more and more digital publics emerge as generative sites for cross-cultural communication and soc...
Ancient female-centered Native American myths reveal pre-colonial attitudes about gender, gender rol...
This dissertation asserts that existing definitions of gender and understandings of sexuality need t...
As more and more digital publics emerge as generative sites for cross-cultural communication and soc...
My research examines indigenous perspectives on representation and sovereignty to explore media comp...
An Indigenous feminist approach to Native literature reveals the ways in which Native authors attemp...
[eng] Today’s feminism’s claims of intersectionality are questionable. Although more women are start...
In their book Introduction to Feminist Thought and Action, Menoukha Robin Case and Allison V. Craig ...
Feminist Maya women have been contesting the narrative imposed by the state, social prejudices and m...
Patriarchal and colonial structures have dominated North American society for centuries, consistentl...
My dissertation introduced a Native feminist reading methodology as a transhistorical methodology th...
As settler colonialism has forcibly constricted vast expanses of Indigenous lands, criss-crossing th...
In The Medium Is the Movement: The Internet’s Influence on Feminist Rhetorical Strategies, I assert ...