By Their Work

Indigenous Women's Digital Media in North America

Joanna Hearne editor Karrmen Crey editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Minnesota Press

Publishing:11th Nov '25

£96.00

This title is due to be published on 11th November, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This hardback is available in another edition too:

By Their Work cover

A first-of-its-kind collection to transform our understanding of digital media from Indigenous women creators

Indigenous women form a vital force in digital media production now and have over the past several decades—in fact, nearly three quarters of the projects at the 2017 imagineNATIVE Film and Media Arts Festival were created by women. By Their Work highlights the prismatic nature of Indigenous women's digital media, connecting the digital arts with their creative labor and adaptive activism.

Joanna Hearne and Karrmen Crey bring together a collection of essays and interviews to highlight the voices of powerful and important media makers, from Indigenous video game creators to animators to social media influencers and from theorists of early Indigenous digital media to current practitioners, including trans and nonbinary creators often left out of public narratives about the digital. Creating a space to hear critical voices on Indigenous media history, theory, and production, the contributors share stories, genealogies, and practices behind Indigenous women's power and presence in the digital world.

Focusing on the history of digital media as a whole, this collection presents a compelling case for Indigenous women's crucial roles across the history of digital forms and platforms. In doing so, By Their Work transforms digital Indigenous studies in the twenty-first century.

Contributors: Nanobah Becker; Reilley Bishop-Stall, McGill U; Meagan Byrne; Tawny Trottier Cale; Dana Claxton; Crystal Harrison Collin; Elizabeth Day; Kristin L. Dowell, Florida State U; Miranda Due; Heid E. Erdrich; Marcella Ernest, U of New Mexico; Marisa Erven; David Gaertner, U of British Columbia; Carol Geddes; Faye Ginsburg, New York U; Patuk N. Glenn; Lisa Jackson; Jacqueline Land, William Jewell College; Jason Edward Lewis, Concordia University, Montreal; Joshua D. Miner, U of Kansas; Salma Monani, Gettysburg College; Jas M. Morgan, Simon Fraser U; Archer Pechawis, York U; Mikhel Proulx, Queen's U Canada; Ryan Rice; Jolene Rickard, Cornell U; Channette Romero, U of Georgia; Wendi Sierra, Texas Christian U; Skawennati.

Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction. By Their Work, They Are Vital to the People

Karrmen Crey and Joanna Hearne

Part I. Histories

1. CyberPowWow and the First Wave of Indigenous Media Arts: A Roundtable

Skawennati, Archer Pechawis, Ryan Rice, Jason Edward Lewis, and Mikhel Proulx

2. Twenty-Five Years after Nation to Nation: Digital Space as Place

Jolene Rickard

3. Loretta Sarah Todd’s Screen Sovereignty

Faye Ginsburg

Part II. Animation and Gaming

4. “Women Had to Be Strong”: An Interview with Carol Geddes

Jacqueline Land

5. Curation and Collaboration: An Interview with Heid E. Erdrich and Elizabeth Day

Joanna Hearne

6. Modeling Resistance: Indigenous Computational Bodies and Settler Colonial Violence

Joshua D. Miner

7. Gender and Indigenous Gaming: A Roundtable

Meagan Byrne, Marisa Erven, Wendi Sierra, Miranda Due, David Gaertner, Karrmen Crey, and Joanna Hearne

Part III. Short Forms

8. Stitching Kinship through Media: Indigenous Women’s Experimental Short Films in Canada

Kristin L. Dowell

9. “It’s Not the What, It’s the How”: An Interview with Lisa Jackson

Karrmen Crey

10. Inuit Remix: Body and Sonic Sovereignty in Inuit Women’s Digital Music Videos

Channette Romero

11. Indigenous Ecofeminisms as (Re)Mapping Projects: An Interview with Filmmaker Nanobah Becker

Salma Monani

Part IV. Social Media and Digital Platforms

12. #FinePeopleFromIndigenousLands: Selfie Presencing and Radically Relational Aesthetics in Native Twitter’s Virtual Reservation

Jacqueline Land

13. Gender and Indigenous Social Media: A Roundtable

Patuk N. Glenn, Tawny Trottier Cale, Crystal Harrison Collin, Jacqueline Land, Joanna Hearne, and Karrmen Crey

14. “I Was Jumped”: “Queer” and Trans Indigenous Feminist Micro-Influence on TikTok

Jas M. Morgan

Part V. Remix: Archives and Experiments in Digital Photography

15. Past Projections: Resilience, Resurgence, and Spectral Presence in Meryl McMaster’s Ancestral

Reilley Bishop-Stall

16. Native Feminist Remix: 16 mm Film, NDN Telephone Etiquette, and Basic-Ass Settler Colonialism

Marcella Ernest

17. Woman in Black: Mourning Wounded Knee

Dana Claxton

Coda: Shared Futures

Joanna Hearne and Karrmen Crey

Contributors

Index

ISBN: 9781517919054

Dimensions: 254mm x 178mm x 17mm

Weight: 765g

344 pages