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1998

6 x 9 in.
326 pp., 10 b&w photos

ISBN: 978-0-292-77084-3
$24.95, paperback
Print-on-demand title; expedited shipping not available
33% website discount: $16.72

 
 

The University of Texas Press will be closed for Thanksgiving on November 26 and 27; we will reopen on Monday, November 30.

 
 
     

Inventing the Savage
The Social Construction of Native American Criminality

By Luana Ross

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

 

"Professor Ross, through painstaking phenomenological analysis, has unmasked some of the ways in which (race, class, and gender) prejudices, and their internalization by individuals targeted by them, exert enormous influence on the processes and outcomes of the American criminal justice system.... This book will be of tremendous import to a broad, interdisciplinary audience."

—Franke Wilmer, Associate Professor of Political Science, Montana State University

Luana Ross writes, "Native Americans disappear into Euro-American institutions of confinement at alarming rates. People from my reservation appeared to simply vanish and magically return. [As a child] I did not realize what a 'real' prison was and did not give it any thought. I imagined this as normal; that all families had relatives who went away and then returned."

In this pathfinding study, Ross draws upon the life histories of imprisoned Native American women to demonstrate how race/ethnicity, gender, and class contribute to the criminalizing of various behaviors and subsequent incarceration rates. Drawing on the Native women's own words, she reveals the violence in their lives prior to incarceration, their respective responses to it, and how those responses affect their eventual criminalization and imprisonment. Comparisons with the experiences of white women in the same prison underline the significant role of race in determining women's experiences within the criminal justice system.

Luana Ross (Salish) has taught at the University of California at Berkeley and is currently Associate Professor of Native American studies at the University of California, Davis.


 Of Related Interest Crozier-Hogle and Wilson, Surviving in Two Worlds
Díaz-Cotto, Chicana Lives and Criminal Justice
Holm, Strong Hearts, Wounded Souls

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