Maile Renee Arvin

Title

Maile Renee Arvin

Rights

Image used with author's permission. Photograph credit to Maile Renee Arvin/The University of Utah.

Birthplace

Kanaka ‘Ōiwi, Hawaiʻi

Primary Sources

Arvin, M. (2020). Re-framing and refusing the enduring colonial fascination with Polynesian origins. Duke University Press. Accessed March 27, 2023. https://dukeupress.wordpress.com/2020/07/22/re-framing-and-refusing-the-enduring-colonial-fascination-with-polynesian-origins/

Arvin, M. (2019). Possessing Polynesians: The science of settler colonial whiteness in Hawaiʹi and Oceania. Duke University Press.

Arvin, M. (2018). Polynesia is a project, not a place: Polynesian proximities to whiteness in Cloud Atlas and beyond. In Fojas, C., Guevarra R.P. & Sharma, N.T.(Eds.) Beyond ethnicity: New politics of race in Hawai'i (pp. 21–47). University of Hawai'i Press. https://doi.org/10.21313/hawaii/9780824869885.003.0003

Arvin, M. (2016, November 24). The future is Indigenous: Decolonizing Thanksgiving. Truthout. Accessed March 27, 2023. https://truthout.org/articles/the-future-is-indigenous-decolonizing-thanksgiving/.

Arvin, M., Tuck, E., & Morrill, A. (2013). Decolonizing feminism: Challenging connections between settler colonialism and heteropatriarchy. Feminist Formations, 25(1), 8–34. https://doi.org/10.1353/ff.2013.0006

Arvin, M (2012) Spectacles of Citizenship: Native Hawaiian Sovereignty Gets a Makeover. In Fojas, C. and Guevarra,R. (Eds). Transnational Crossroads: Reimagining Asian America, Latin America, and the American Pacific, Lincoln: University of Nebraska.

Secondary Sources

Arvin, M. R. (2009). Sovereignty will not be funded: Good Indigenous citizenship in Hawai’i’s non-profit industrial complex. S&F Online, Issue 13.2 | Spring 2016.

Extra Resources

Maile Arvin, The Science of Settler Colonial Whiteness in Hawai`i & Oceania, Seminar (July 1, 2021). Brown University. YouTube. Accessed January 19, 2023. https://youtu.be/H20OyqyHB14

Collection

Citation

“Maile Renee Arvin,” Decoloniality, First Nations Thinkers and thought and practices from the Global South, accessed November 24, 2024, https://omeka.cloud.unimelb.edu.au/decoloniality-and-thinkers-from-the-global-south/items/show/358.

Output Formats