Audra Simpson
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Audra Simpson | |
|---|---|
| Known for | Mohawk Interruptus: Political Life Across the Borders of Settler States |
| Academic background | |
| Education | PhD (Anthropology) McGill University |
| Thesis | To the Reserve and Back Again: Kahnawake Mohawk Narratives of Self, Home and Nation (2004) |
| Doctoral advisor | Bruce Trigger; Colin H. Scott |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | Anthropology |
| Sub-discipline | Political Anthropology, Indigenous Studies, American and Canadian Studies, Gender studies, Sexuality Studies. |
| Institutions | Columbia University |
| Notable ideas | Ethnographic Refusal |
| Website | https://anthropology.columbia.edu/content/audra-simpson |
Audra Simpson is Professor of Anthropology at Columbia University. Her work engages with Indigenous politics in the United States and Canada and cuts across anthropology, Indigenous studies, Gender studies, and Political science. She has won multiple awards for her book, Mohawk Interruptus: Political Life Across the Borders of Settler States. She has also won multiple teaching awards from Columbia University, including the Mark Van Doren Award making her the second anthropologist to win the honour. She is a citizen of the Kahnawà:ke Mohawk Nation.[1]
Simpson completed her BA in anthropology from Concordia University in 1993. She subsequently joined the MA program in Anthropology at McGill University.[2]
She received her PhD in anthropology from McGill in 2004[2] for her dissertation, To the Reserve and Back Again: Kahnawake Mohawk Narratives of Self, Home and Nation, supported by Dartmouth College's Charles Eastman Fellowship and the American Anthropological Association's Minority Dissertation Award in 2002. Simpson's thesis explores the "[w]ays in which residence, location, movement and political discourses distill into a mobile and collective 'identity' for the Mohawk of Kahnawake and other Iroquois peoples across the borders on their reserves and the states that surround them."[3]
During her studies, Simpson was involved in the 'white feminist movement' in Brooklyn, New York. She used feminist language to describe the gendered landscape around her. However, she grew frustrated as her peers involved in the movement were largely concerned with abortion and fair wages. These were disconnected from Indigenous women's experiences and rights and eschewed feminism altogether. At her home in Kahnawake, the gender discrimination stemming from the Indian Act had grave impact. Therefore, she got involved in the local chapter of the Native Women's Association of Canada to seek change. On these decisions, Simpson reflects, "I stopped being the other kind of feminist and I just started being a responsible Mohawk."[4]