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Category: 17.5. Efforts to obtain federal recognition
TRAP001. Trapani, William. Re/cognizing
Native American sovereignty in an age of manifest manners. Journal
of Law in Society 3 (Winter 2002): 1-29. 10,529 words. 68 notes.
Publication type: Journal article
Electronic access: Full text available in LEXIS-NEXIS
Universe
This article uses the 1991 joint Congressional hearing
on federal recognition of the Lumbee (see The Lumbee Indians: an
annotated bibliography, item 1386), particularly the two positions
articulated in the arguments, to discuss Native American identity politics.
He explains three effects produced by the recognition process:
first, reinforcement of the Anglo-Euramerican political order through
containment of Native Americans as primitives; second, covering
over the violent origin of the American nation and, in particular, the
ways in which the Indian becomes an essential technology
for that performance; and, finally, a reinscription of the blood quantum
standards used as a pretext for racial caste/ing in America and imperialism
abroad (page 4).
In the course of his analysis, Trapani discusses the
following issues:
Ways in which our cultures conceptions
of the proper Indian have been transformed into a legal
construct by the federal recognition process. Trapani uses ideas and
arguments from Gayatri Spivak, Gerald Vizenor, Larzer Ziff, Aimee Carillo
Rowe, Jacques Derrida, Jack D. Forbes, Wendy Brown, Peggy Phelan, and
others.
The Lumbee struggle for true federal recognition since the 1956
Lumbee Act.
How the intense desire to become official Indians
causes members of non-recognized tribes to become supporters of the
recognition process and the conceptions of Indianness behind it.
The 1978 Federal Acknowledgment Process (FAP) administered by
the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the requirements that are particularly
difficult for Eastern tribes to satisfy. Trapani explains, . .
. Eastern tribes are much less likely to be able to demonstrate the
type of insular community that the criteria requires. The result is
a type of reservation fascination ingrained into the application
of the criteria so that even though race and/or ethnicity considerations
are theoretically disavowed, those Indians that have the correct skin
color and adherence to familiar Native practices are those most likely
to garner recognition. In this manner, the recognition process ensures
that the most proper Indian is also one that is most aligned with historical
conceptions of a primitive Native American (page 20).
Additional Subjects: Indian identity
| Federal Acknowledgment Process (FAP) | Blood quantum
This annotation was written on: June
4, 2003; edited on June 21, 2003.
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
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