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Review
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Real Indians: Identity and the Survival of Native America,
by Eva Marie Garroutte. Berkeley: University of California Press,
2003. 223 pages, $50.00 cloth, $19.95 paper.
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How many ways can one define American Indian? Is "Indianness"
a product of genetic heritage or cultural affiliation? Is it some
mythic quality that manifests itself out of thin air and can only
be verified by those sharing similar qualities? Is American Indian
a static term, immutable since its first (erroneous) use more than
500 years ago? Or does this identity follow the lead of Old Man
Coyote and shift shape as times change? These are some of the real
and tough questions that Eva Marie Garroutte takes on in Real
Indians: Identity and the Survival of Native America. A sociologist
by trade, Garroutte brings social science methodology to bear on
one of the most provocative issues facing American Indian people
and their nations in the United States today. Along the way, she
also makes a compelling argument for an entirely new approach to
this conundrum.
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Real Indians divides itself
into two different sections. In the first four chapters, the author
explores the various ways that Indian identity has been defined
by Natives and non-Natives alike. Here, Garroutte is interested
in the historical dimensions of her subject. She notes that law,
biology, and culture have all provided means through which individuals
can claim and defend indigenous heritage. Recognizing that these
three categories often overlap to further complicate an already
complex issue, she uses case studies and interviews to illuminate
the variety of perspectives contemporary Indians have on this subject.
Garroutte reveals a range of tribal opinions that is both interesting
and timely. With the proliferation of gaming and the rise of the
"casino elite," a verifiable identity is arguably more
important now for American Indians than it has been since the imposition
of the Dawes Act (1887). But validating a claim raises awkward and
difficult questions. What constitutes the proper and appropriate
framework for making such a determination? How do enrollment, blood
quantum, self-identification, and cultural association fit into
this twenty-first century struggle? And who should have the right
to make such decisions? What can individuals or the tribes or the
federal government bring to this discussion that is new?
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With this list of questions in mind,
Eva Garroutte uses the latter section of Real Indians to
argue for the creation of a new mode of inquiry grounded in Native
American cultural and intellectual traditions. This new perspective,
"Radical Indigenism," echoes Audre Lord's famous assertion
that the master's tools are not the best weapons for dismantling
the master's house. Or, in this case, that continued reference to
Eurocentric, race-based definitions superimposed by outsiders on
tribal communities for their own ends may not serve tribal interests.
Rather, the author suggests, solutions to the problem of determining
the true nature of Indianness lie within the "orientation"
and "philosophies of knowledge" held by Native peoples.
Identity politics notwithstanding, the doctrine of "Radical
Indigenism" is the true heart of Real Indians. This
new construct, as she envisions it, requires far more than just
a passing nod to the intellectual history of Native nations. "Radical
Indigenism" celebrates tribal intellectual traditions. It asks
Indians to proclaim their own stores of knowledge as essential to
understanding their cultures while challenging scholars (tribal
and otherwise) to reconceptualize the entire process of academic
inquiry. Along with Native activist-thinkers like Vine Deloria,
Jr., Wilma Mankiller, Oren Lyons, and Winona LaDuke, Eva Garroutte
contends that any resolution of the myriad problems facing American
Indians today must be contingent upon a respect for and employment
of indigenous intellectual perspectives. If, as the author recommends,
tribal peoples and their communities decide to look to their own
unique knowledge bases, they may devise definitions of Indianness
that could subsume idiosyncratic political, social, religious, and
economic differences. They could also privilege members of the tribal
intelligentsia like elders and teachers while, finally, refuting
the presumed expertise of outsiders
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| Eva Garroutte uses Real Indians
to remind readers that the intellectual heritage of colonialism
is, regrettably, alive and well. To bring down this particular house,
one more than five centuries old that has served the colonizers
and their descendants all too well, it is necessary to allow for
the existence of Native American knowledge. It is necessary to go
a step farther and accept this way of knowing and this mode of discourse
as valid. Only then will Natives, non-Natives, academicians, politicians,
and activists have the proper tools to complete this tremendous
but essential task. |
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California State University, Chico
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Lisa E. Emmerich
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