Matthias AndrE Voigt is a teacher of English, history, and politics in Berlin, Germany, and a part-time lecturer in modern American history at Free University Berlin.
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Acknowledgments A Note on Terminology Abbreviations Introduction 1. Indigenous Men and Peoplehood under US Colonial Domination 2. From Powerlessness to Protest: Reinventing Indigenous Men in AIM, 1968-1972 3. "We Became Warriors Again": Recasting Race, Gender and Nation, 1970-1973 4. Warriors for a Nation at Wounded Knee, 1973 5. Reinventing Warriorhood and Nationalist Struggle after 1973 Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index
An archivally driven and theoretically sophisticated analysis of Indigenous masculinity and manliness during the height of the Red Power Movement has long evaded this period-until now. Matthias AndrE Voigt has written one of the best books on the Indigenous freedom struggle and its connection to gender, self-determination, and nationalism. A well-researched, conceptually sound book, you will no doubt want to add this to your bookshelves and syllabi if you want to understand this period from a unique and important vantage point.""-Kyle T. Mays, author of An Afro-Indigenous History of the United States and City of Dispossessions: Indigenous Peoples, African Americans, and the Creation of Modern Detroit""Matthais AndrE Voigt has inaugurated what one can only hope will be the next generation of scholarship on an era desperately in need of new perspectives and approaches. Rather than rehashing a celebratory narrative of resistance, this work delves beneath the surface to examine critically the construction of gender-and specifically masculinity-in the context of the American Indian Movement's brand of Red Power. That it does so with an eye toward speaking to scholarship on anticolonial movements globally makes it that much more compelling.""-Daniel M. Cobb, author of Say We Are Nations: Documents of Politics and Protest in Indigenous America since 1887 ""In this masterful analysis of the American Indian Movement, Mathias Voigt explains the sui generis warrior tradition embedded in Indigenous men. This Native patriotism manifested in the civil rights era with AIM warriors of this modern masculinity willing to fight and die for Native sovereignty.""-Donald L. Fixico, Muscogee, Seminole, Shawnee, and Sac and Fox, and author of The American Indian Mind in a Linear World

