Cornell University Emblemthe department of Anthropology
Faculty
Audra Simpson
Office: McGraw 208
Phone: (607) 255-6783
My research is energized by the problem of recognition, by its passage beyond (and below) the aegis of the state into the grounded field of political self-designation, self-description and subjectivity. My doctoral research was prompted specifically by the struggle of Kahnawake Mohawks to find the proper way to afford political recognition to each other, their struggle to do this in different places and spaces and the challenges of formulating membership against a history of colonial impositions. As a result of this ethnographic engagement I am interested especially in the formations of citizenship and nationhood that occur in spite of state power and imposition and in particular, I am interested in declarative and practice-oriented acts of independence. In order to stay faithful to the words of my interlocutors I am interested as well in the use of narrative as data, in alternative forms of ethnographic writing and in critical forms of history. In order to stay faithful to my own wishes, I work at every turn to enter the fields of anthropology and Native American Studies into a critical and constructive dialogue with each other.

Selected Publications

 

2008 "Comment: the "Problem" of native Mental Health: Liberalism, Multiculturalism and the (non) Efficacy of Tears. Ethos 36 (3): 375-8
2008 "From White into Red: Captivity Narratives as Alchemies of Race and Citizenship." American Quarterly 60 92):251-7/
2008

"Subjects of Sovereignty: Indigeneity, The Revenue Rule and Juridics of Failed Consent." Law and Contemporary Problems (edited by Annelise Riles, Karen Knop and Ralf Michaels) (Summer, forthcoming)

2007 "On Ethnographic Refusal: Indigeneity, 'Voice' and Colonial Citizenship." Junctures: The Journal for Thematic Dialogue 9: 67-80.
  On the Logic of Discernment American Quarterly 59(2): 479-491.
2000 "Paths Toward a Mohawk Nation: Narratives of Citizenship and Nationhood in Kahnawake." Duncan Ivison, Paul Patton and Will Sanders (eds.). Political Theory and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Pp: 113-136.
1999 Volume Editor, Recherches amerindiennes au Québec "Iroquois au présent du passé" Vol. XXIX, no. 2.
  "Introduction: Au delà de la tradition des études iroquoises traditionelles" [translated from English by Dominque Legros] Recherches amerindiennes au Québec Vol. XXIX, no. 2 1999- 3-9.
1998 "The Empire Laughs Back: Tradition, Power and Play in the Work of Shelley Niro and Ryan Rice." Sylvia S. Kasprycki with Doris Stambrau and Alexandra Roth, (eds.). IroquoisART: Visual Expressions of Contemporary Native American Artists. Aldenstadt: European Review of Native American Studies Monographs I. Pp: 48-54.