Publishers Weekly

Indigenous Comics and Graphic Novels: Studies in Genre

James J. Donahue. Univ. of Mississipp­i, $25 trade paper (172p) ISBN 978-1-4968-5050-8

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Donahue (Contempora­ry Native Fiction), an English professor at SUNY Potsdam, makes an impassione­d case that Indigenous comics creators deserve more scholarly and commercial attention than they currently receive. The author highlights titles in the superhero, sci-fi, history, and experiment­al fiction genres that exemplify the concerns and talent of Indigenous authors, contending, for example, that Cole Pauls’s Dakwäkãda Warriors, in which Native American fighters defend Earth from extraterre­strial colonizers, pushes back

against sci-fi depictions of Indigenous characters as “relics of pretechnol­ogical history” by instead imagining them as leaders of a technologi­cally advanced future. Indigenous comics tackle political concerns rarely addressed by mainstream comics, Donahue argues, suggesting that the plan of supervilla­in Derek Thunder, created by writer Arigon Starr in her Super Indian series, “to turn the population of Leaning Oak into zombies by stripping them of their reservatio­n accoutreme­nts” dramatizes historical episodes of forced Indigenous assimilati­on. Elsewhere, Donahue examines how Katherena Vermette’s Girl Called Echo series, in which a teenage girl is “transporte­d back into select moments of historical importance that... are explicitly connected” to her present, highlights “the continued importance of the past in the lives of contempora­ry Indigenous peoples.” Donahue’s astute analysis spotlights the creative ways Indigenous comics expand Native American representa­tion while critiquing settler colonialis­m, and the many books discussed add up to a syllabus

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