Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) D. Leroux , J. Anthony Gomes
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Saint Mary's University
ANO 2019
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO American Indian Culture and Research Journal
ISSN 0161-6463
E-ISSN 2474-0639
DOI 10.17953/AICRJ.43.4.LEROUX
CITAÇÕES 1
ARQUIVOS 1
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 1B4DCA417BF09CA99A8CE29A56D4481E

Resumo

This article builds on work examining how hundreds of thousands of white French descendants in the northeastern part of the continent have been shifting into 'Indigenous' identities in the past two decades or so. The first part of the paper explains the workings of 'aspirational descent,' that is, when a French woman from the 1600s is turned into an 'Indigenous' ancestor for the purpose of claiming indigeneity in the present. The second part of the paper explores the creation of 'family lore' by several French descendants using aspirational descent in courtroom testimony. Overall, the author illustrates how stories about long-ago Indigenous ancestry in white settler families, such as that of Elizabeth Warren, often involve creative interpretations of childhood stories that rely on the logic of elimination inherent to settler colonialism.


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