Tayac, a historian with the National Museum of the American Indian, documents the historical convergences and divergences of Black Americans, Native Americans, and African-Native Americans. These essays reveal instances of collaborative activism across these different groups, their clashes, and the state-sponsored and systematic discrimination of them – often under the all-encompassing legislative category of “Negro” or “Indian.” Containing discussions of archival accounts, creative works, legislation, activism, and DNA and heritage, Tayac’s collection reveals the continual struggle for Black, Native, and African-Native peoples for recognition, identity, and self-determination.
While her selected essayists spent considerable time criticizing existing scholarship and providing evidence for the indivisible links between these groups, I found they left much to be interpreted, and the stakes and future directions of this intersectional discipline need to be fully fleshed out.