What People Are Saying
"In Scales of Resistance, Blackwell rethinks scale beyond solely its colonial and masculinist forms by centering Indigenous women’s organizing and geographies. By highlighting the work that Indigenous women (sometimes migrants) do at varying scales, as well as the creation of new scales based on their readings of power in different places and their own cosmovisions, Blackwell’s book is an important corrective to scalar analyses that invisibilize marginalized actors." Rebekah Kartal, Antipode
“The importance of Maylei Blackwell’s theoretical intervention and her ethnographic material cannot be overstated. Providing a new understanding of Indigenous migration and transnational organizing, Scales of Resistance will make an invaluable contribution to feminist studies, Native American and Indigenous studies, hemispheric American studies, Latinx studies, and critical ethnic studies.” María Josefina Saldaña-Portillo, author of Indian Given: Racial Geographies across Mexico and the United States
“Maylei Blackwell’s Scales of Resistance is essential reading for those of us interested in how Indigenous feminisms transform settler colonial histories across geographies, borders, families, and bodies. Her collection of eyewitness accounts, ethnographic interviews, and her analysis of interstitial and multiscalar political activisms in Mexico, from Oaxaca to California, testifies to how Indigenous women have organized throughout the Americas to transform scales of power into resistance.” Jodi A. Byrd, author of The Transit of Empire: Indigenous Critiques of Colonialism