Robert Alexander Innes is a Plains Cree member of
Cowessess First Nation. He holds a PhD in American Indian Studies
from the University of Arizona and is an Assistant Professor in the
department of Native Studies at the University of Saskatchewan,
Canada.
Kim Anderson is a Cree/Métis educator. She is an
Associate Professor in Indigenous Studies at Wilfrid Laurier
University, Brantford, Canada and is the author of A Recognition of
Being: Reconstructing Native Womanhood, and is the co-editor, with
Bonita Lawrence, of Strong Women Stories: Native Vision and
Community Survival.
Sam McKegney is a teacher and scholar of
Indigenous and Canadian literature at Queen's University, Canada.
"A strong beginning to the work of critical studies of Indigenous
masculinities."--John Gamber "Transmotion"
"Necessary reading for anyone doing work on Indigenous
masculinities. It will be a touchstone in this area for some time.
"--Jean-Paul Restoule "BC Studies"
"The approaches and perspectives that Innes and Anderson have
collected here are valuable for scholars, students, and teachers
across the humanities and social sciences as they continue the
important journey along the road to decolonization."--Rob LeBlanc
"The Canadian Journal of Native Studies"
"We can learn a great deal about the workings of gender and the
intersections with colonialism from the examples assembled by Innes
and Anderson, and Indigenous Men and Masculinities will extend
conversations thoughtfully about Indigenous manhood in the
twenty-first century."--Jean-Paul Restoule "BC Studies"
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