This edited volume focuses on experiences with Indigenous resurgence in "everyday" settings - those often unseen, unacknowledged actions that promote community health and well-being. The twenty-two contributors to this book highlight how everyday actions can be important emancipatory sites for understanding the relational, experiential and dynamic dimensions of Indigenous resurgence. Overall, these daily acts of resurgence, at the community, family and personal levels, can be critical for deepening the ways we think about resistance, education, and transformative change.
This edited volume focuses on experiences with Indigenous resurgence in "everyday" settings - those often unseen, unacknowledged actions that promote community health and well-being. The twenty-two contributors to this book highlight how everyday actions can be important emancipatory sites for understanding the relational, experiential and dynamic dimensions of Indigenous resurgence. Overall, these daily acts of resurgence, at the community, family and personal levels, can be critical for deepening the ways we think about resistance, education, and transformative change.