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New Faculty Affiliate Cheryl Suzack Studies Indigenous Law and Literature
The Canadian Studies Program is pleased to celebrate Indigenous Peoples’ Day with a warm welcome to Cheryl Suzack, our newest faculty affiliate.
Professor Suzack joined the UC Berkeley faculty this year as a Chancellor’s Professor in the Department of Ethnic Studies. A member of the Batchewana First Nation (Ojibwe), her teaching and research focus on Indigenous law and literature, with a particular emphasis on writing by Indigenous women. She comes to Berkeley from the University of Toronto, where she held joint appointments in English, Indigenous Studies, and Law.
Professor Suzack received her PhD from the University of Alberta and has held visiting fellowships at the University of Naples, Smith College, and McGill University. In 2018, she was a Fulbright Fellow at Georgetown University, and she served as a research collaborator with the Centre for Humanities Research at the University of the Western Cape and the Jackman Humanities Institute at the University of Toronto.
Professor Suzack employs interdisciplinary frameworks informed by race, gender, and sexuality studies to examine how Indigenous communities are located and politically contained through multi-levelled practices of gender and racialization. Through literary and legal analysis, she highlights topics such as tribal membership discrimination; the removal of Indigenous children; imposed blood quantum categories; and colonial forms of land dispossession as issues of injustice entangled with Indigenous self-determination. Her monograph Indigenous Women’s Writing and the Cultural Study of Law analyzed these issues as portrayed in Indigenous women’s storytelling. Professor Suzack also collaborated with Canadian Studies affiliate, Shari Huhndorf, as a co-editor and contributor to the award-winning collection, Indigenous Women and Feminism: Politics, Activism, Culture (UBC, 2010).
Professor Suzack’s current research is forthcoming in Law & Critique and in Ravens Talking: Indigenous Feminist Legal Studies (University of Toronto Press). Her interdisciplinary research on Indigenous law has appeared in the Elgar Concise Encyclopedia of Law and Literature as well as numerous journals. |