Nice thanks just the title has got my attention already. One of my best friends is Lakota and my stepdad is Navajo, so learning about their history from anything outside an imperialist perspective is always super interesting to me.
James c scott wrote about this as a general condition of empire. Applicable from the Roman relationship with barbarians to modernity. You can even place the contemporary extractivist policies practised in the thirld world in that framework.
Damn that's interesting, got any reading material or podcasts on the subject?
I'm like 60% I learned that stuff from this episode of RevLeft radio, but it's been a long time.
Nice thanks just the title has got my attention already. One of my best friends is Lakota and my stepdad is Navajo, so learning about their history from anything outside an imperialist perspective is always super interesting to me.
James c scott wrote about this as a general condition of empire. Applicable from the Roman relationship with barbarians to modernity. You can even place the contemporary extractivist policies practised in the thirld world in that framework.