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List of figures List of contributors Acknowledgements Introduction PART 1 Disciplinary knowledge and epistemology 1 The institutional and intellectual trajectories of Indigenous Studies in North America: Harnessing the `NAISA Effect¿ 2 Ricochet: It¿s not where you land; it¿s how far you fly 3 Multi-generational Indigenous feminisms: From F word to what IFs 4 Against crisis epistemology 5 Matariki and the decolonisation of time 6 Indigenous women writers in unexpected places 7 Critical Indigenous methodology and the problems of history: Love and death beyond boundaries in Victorian British Columbia 8 Decolonising psychology: Self-determination and social and emotional well-being 9 Colours of creation PART 2 Indigenous theory and method 10 The emperor¿s `new¿ materialisms: Indigenous materialisms and disciplinary colonialism 11 Intimate encounters Aboriginal labour stories and the violence of the colonial archive 12 M¿ku An¿ e Hanga T¿ku Nei Whare: I myself shall build my house 13 On the politics of Indigenous translation: Listening to Indigenous peoples in and on their own terms 14 Auntie¿s bundle: Conversation and research methodologies with Knowledge Gifter Sherry Copenace 15 When nothingness revokes certainty: A M¿ori speculation 16 Vital earth/vibrant earthworks/living earthworks vocabularies 17 "To be a good relative means being a good relative to everyone": Indigenous feminisms is for everyone 18 `Objectivity¿ and repatriation: Pulling on the colonisers¿ tale PART 3 Sovereignty 19 Incommensurable sovereignties: Indigenous ontology matters 20 Mana M¿ori motuhake: M¿ori concepts and practices of sovereignty 21 He Ali¿i Ka ¿¿ina, Ua Mau Kona Ea: Land is the chief, long may she reign 22 Relational accountability in Indigenous governance: Navigating the doctrine of distrust in the Osage Nation 23 Ellos Deatnu and post-state Indigenous feminist sovereignty 24 Striking back: The 1980s Aboriginal art movement and the performativity of sovereignty 25 Communality as everyday Indigenous sovereignty in Oaxaca, Mexico 26 American Indian sovereignty versus the United States PART 4 Political economies, ecologies, and technologies 27 A story about the time we had a global pandemic and how it affected my life and work as a critical Indigenous scholar 28 Once were Maoists: Third World currents in Fourth World anticolonialism, Vancouver, 1967¿1975 29 Resurgent kinships: Indigenous relations of well-being vs. humanitarian health economies 30 Indigenous environmental justice: Towards an ethical and sustainable future 31 Diverse Indigenous environmental identities: M¿ori resource management innovations 32 The ski or the wheel?: Foregrounding Sámi technological Innovation in the Arctic region and challenging its invisibility in the history of humanity 33 The Indigenous digital footprint PART 5 Bodies, performance, and praxis 34 Identity is a poor substitute for relating: Genetic ancestry, critical polyamory, property, and relations 35 Indigeneity and performance 36 Indigenous insistence on film 37 The politics of language in Indigenous cinema 38 Entangled histories and transformative futures: Indigenous sport in the 21st century 39 Raranga as healing methodology: Body, place, and making 40 Becoming knowledgeable: Indigenous embodied praxis 41 Nyuragil ¿ playing the `game¿ 42 Academic and STEM success: Pathways to Indigenous sovereignty 43 Aboriginal child as knowledge producer: Bringing into dialogue Indigenist epistemologies and culturally responsive pedagogies for schooling