
Indian Enough
Essays
Paul Chaat Smith(Author)
University of Minnesota Press
Will be published approx. on 26. January 2027
Book
Hardback
224 pages
978-1-5179-2275-7 (ISBN)
Description
An acerbic, candid reckoning with Indigenous identity, visibility, and the messy realities of cultural change
In Indian Enough, curator and critic Paul Chaat Smith probes the paradox of contemporary Indigeneity: enormous, hard-won cultural visibility in museum exhibits, land acknowledgments, mascot removals, and more alongside persistent erasure in everyday life. Rejecting the easy comforts of identity politics (he was, he admits, a fan of the Land O'Lakes Butter Maiden), Smith brings "honest confusion" to his inquiry, using sharp wit and wry humor to confront the gap between symbolism and lived reality.
Both memoir and cultural critique, Indian Enough follows Smith from a suburban childhood in Washington, D.C., filled with Kurt Vonnegut and Vine Deloria Jr., through teenage years steeped in Native politics leading to a thrilling and eventually disillusioning stint with the American Indian Movement, to his pivotal role in creating the inaugural exhibitions at the National Museum of the American Indian. His insider account of NMAI exposes how well-meaning efforts to redress Native erasure can simply swap one set of stereotypes for another, and his candor shows how institutions and activists-himself included-all grapple with the tension between good intentions and political realities.
Irreverent and searching, Indian Enough tackles culture writ large-the rise of punk and the fall of AIM, pop culture as a battleground, Indigenous slaveowners and other histories we'd rather forget, MAGA Indians, and what it means to win when the ground keeps shifting-to reveal a truth that's hard to reconcile in an era of "progress": representation is everywhere, certainty is not.
Retail e-book files for this title are screen-reader friendly with images accompanied by short alt text and/or extended descriptions.
In Indian Enough, curator and critic Paul Chaat Smith probes the paradox of contemporary Indigeneity: enormous, hard-won cultural visibility in museum exhibits, land acknowledgments, mascot removals, and more alongside persistent erasure in everyday life. Rejecting the easy comforts of identity politics (he was, he admits, a fan of the Land O'Lakes Butter Maiden), Smith brings "honest confusion" to his inquiry, using sharp wit and wry humor to confront the gap between symbolism and lived reality.
Both memoir and cultural critique, Indian Enough follows Smith from a suburban childhood in Washington, D.C., filled with Kurt Vonnegut and Vine Deloria Jr., through teenage years steeped in Native politics leading to a thrilling and eventually disillusioning stint with the American Indian Movement, to his pivotal role in creating the inaugural exhibitions at the National Museum of the American Indian. His insider account of NMAI exposes how well-meaning efforts to redress Native erasure can simply swap one set of stereotypes for another, and his candor shows how institutions and activists-himself included-all grapple with the tension between good intentions and political realities.
Irreverent and searching, Indian Enough tackles culture writ large-the rise of punk and the fall of AIM, pop culture as a battleground, Indigenous slaveowners and other histories we'd rather forget, MAGA Indians, and what it means to win when the ground keeps shifting-to reveal a truth that's hard to reconcile in an era of "progress": representation is everywhere, certainty is not.
Retail e-book files for this title are screen-reader friendly with images accompanied by short alt text and/or extended descriptions.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Minnesota
United States
Product notice
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
12 black and white illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 11 mm
Weight
397 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-5179-2275-7 (9781517922757)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Paul Chaat Smith (Comanche) is author of Everything You Know about Indians Is Wrong, also published by the University of Minnesota Press, and coauthor with Robert Warrior of Like a Hurricane: The Indian Movement from Alcatraz to Wounded Knee. He was curator at the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian for twenty-four years.