ericgaryanderson's review against another edition

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5.0

Excellent, through and through.

mcsquared's review against another edition

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4.0

A great scholarly piece of work, written by an insider who relates her own family experiences into the larger questions of Native American community and identity. Growing up in Robeson County, it was sometimes hard to understand racial dynamics, and Maynor-Lowry's work does a lot to show how history played a part in why the schools were still segregated when we were going through them and why the Lumbees are still seeking federal recognition.

aimiller's review

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5.0

This book is just so good; Lowery does an incredible job of tracing the Lumbee attempts at recognized nationhood while also holding space for all the differences in opinion in the community and a collective understanding that holds the community together. The nuance she's able to use here is just incredible, and a great model for so many others on how to pay such careful attention to so many factors within the community, and explore them while holding the tension of insider vs outsider recognition in a community (and seeing that those are not necessarily binary, but connected and separate at the same time.) Really encourage folks to read this if they want to think about the processes of Native recognition on a federal and state level, as well as understand community as a complex matter with a number of levels.
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