![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Similar examples are highlighted in Anne Waters’ edited American Indian Thought: Philosophical Essays, Viola Cordova’s How It Is, and Thomas Norton-Smith’s The Dance of Person and Place. Place is not only individuating in its geographic specificity but also unifying in creating a relational entanglement of everything. Power not only moves humans individually but also forms the connections and relations of the human community and natural environment. and Daniel Wildcat’s Power and Place: Indian Education in America, for example, shows that Native concepts of power and place both unify and individuate. This complementary dualism of individual and community is seen throughout the highlighted texts. Indigenous intellectual sovereignty is articulated as a complementary dualism that positively negotiates the seeming conflict between the Indigenous intellectual and the connectedness of meaning and value in tribal sovereignty. 2004, in American Indian Thought: Philosophical Essays. For Cordova (2007), Norton-Smith (2010), Donald Fixico (2003), Anne Waters (2004), and others, there is no singular or unified Native American philosophy. etina (cs) Deutsch (de) English (en) Español (es). This paper surveys four seminal texts of Native American Philosophy from the last decade through the lens of Indigenous intellectual sovereignty. Native North American Philosophy has so much to offer us, both as philosophers. American Indian Thought by Anne Waters, December 2003, Blackwell Publishers edition, Hardcover in English. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |