Description:
This book examines the interaction of literature and radical social movement, exploring how to address the limitations of contemporary anarchist politics through attentive engagement with Native women's literatures. The author argues that anarchists must shift the paradigm that another world is possible to one that sees other worlds here.
Review Quotes: "Warburton's examination of the complicated connections between Native American literature and the anarchist movement is a timely account that sheds light on how we are at a particular settler moment of struggles over space. Her choice of writers is exquisite and she brings new questions and approaches that charge the imagination. By situating the work not as a parallel conversation but rhetorically and with a place-based method that takes seriously the charges outlined in a myriad of Indigenous feminisms genealogies, she brings together complex movements and struggles that are aiming, albeit in various ways, to sustain other worlds, less exploitative and predatory ones, ones with abundant decoloniality. She encourages a difficult conversation between anarchists and Native and Indigenous genealogies on a global scale as if our worlds rely on it--and they do." --Mishuana Goeman, author of Mark My Words: Native Women Mapping Our Nations