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[Commlist] New book: Cinematic Comanches: The Lone Ranger in the Media Borderlands
Fri Feb 04 20:51:02 GMT 2022
We would like to announce a new publication from the University of
Nebraska Press, which we hope will be of interest.
*Cinematic Comanches***
The Lone Ranger in the Media Borderlands
*Dustin Tahmahkera***
*_https://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/9780803286887/cinematic-comanches/
<https://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/9780803286887/cinematic-comanches/>_*
*__*
*Receive a 20% discount online*:*
*CSLF2021*
*Valid until 11:59 GMT, 30^th June 2022. Discount only applies to the
CAP website.
“Exceptional. . . . Written with energy and a capacious critical
sensibility, /Cinematic Comanches/feels like the ‘Yes, we can!’ of
Indigenous film and media criticism. It is also voraciously
interdisciplinary and beautifully executes some of the primary
challenges of public intellectual work—to be both learned and hip, both
theoretically sophisticated and accessible for undergraduates, both
deeply historical and relevant to this very moment.”*—Joanna Hearne,
author of **/Native Recognition: Indigenous Cinema and the Western/*
“Tahmahkera writes in an engaging and sometimes humorous style that is
generally devoid of academic jargon, which makes it accessible to
students yet sophisticated enough in its theoretical grounding to appeal
to scholars of Indigenous and media studies.”*—Dominique Brégent-Heald,
author of **/Borderland Films: American Cinema, Mexico, and Canada
during the Progressive Era/*
For centuries Comanches have captivated imaginations. Yet their story in
popular accounts abruptly stops with the so-called fall of the Comanche
empire in 1875, when Quanah Parker led Comanches onto the reservation in
southwestern Oklahoma. In /Cinematic Comanches/, the first
tribal-specific history of Comanches in film and media, Parker
descendant Dustin Tahmahkera examines how Comanches represent themselves
and are represented by others in recent media. Telling a story of
Comanche family and extended kin and their relations to film, Tahmahkera
reframes a distorted and defeated history of Comanches into a vibrant
story of cinematic traditions, agency, and cultural continuity.
Co-starring a long list of Comanche actors, filmmakers, consultants,
critics, and subjects, /Cinematic Comanches/moves through the politics
of tribal representation and history to highlight the production of
Comanchería cinema. From early silent films and 1950s Westerns to
Disney’s /The Lone Ranger/and the story of how Comanches captured its
controversial Comanche lead Johnny Depp, Tahmahkera argues that Comanche
nationhood can be strengthened through cinema. Tahmahkera’s extensive
research includes interviews with elder LaDonna Harris, who adopted Depp
during filming in one of the most contested films in recent Indigenous
cinematic history. In the fragmented popular narrative of the rise and
fall of Comanches, /Cinematic Comanches/calls for considering mediated
contributions to the cultural resurgence of Comanches today.
*Dustin Tahmahkera*(Comanche) is the Wick Cary Chair of Native American
Cultural Studies in the Department of Native American Studies at the
University of Oklahoma. He is the author of /Tribal Television: Viewing
Native People in Sitcoms./
*University of Nebraska Press | Indigenous Films | January 2022 | 288pp
| 9780803286887 | PB | £26.99**
*Price subject to change.
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