Theorizing colonial culture in Canada: Consumption, Indigenization, and settler moves to innocence on a national scale

Auteurs-es

  • Johanna Lewis

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.25071/k8gzd870

Biographie de l'auteur-e

  • Johanna Lewis

    Johanna Lewis (they/them) is a doctoral candidate in history at York University. Their work focuses on cultural histories of settler colonialism and British imperialism, with a focus on family and intimacy, identity and power, and questions of inheritance, commemoration, and historical production. Johanna is also a researcher with Brittany Luby’s First Nations Guide to the University project, a community organizer with Showing Up for Racial Justice Toronto, and the parent of two magical kids.

Références

Andersen, C. (2014). “Métis”: Race, recognition, and the struggle for Indigenous peoplehood. UBC Press.

Dean, M. (2013). Inheriting a canoe paddle: The canoe in discourses of English-Canadian nationalism. University of Toronto Press.

Deloria, P. (1998). Playing Indian. Yale University Press.

Erickson, B. (2013). Canoe nation: Nature, race, and the making of a Canadian icon. UBC Press.

Francis, D. (1997). National dreams: Myth, memory, and Canadian history. Arsenal ulp Press.

Gaudry, A. (2013). The Métis-ization of Canada: The process of claiming Louis Riel, métissage, and the Métis people as Canada’s mythical origin. Aboriginal Policy Studies, 2(2), 64 – 87.

Leroux, D. (2019). Distorted descent: White claims to Indigenous identity. University of Manitoba Press.

Mackey, E. (1998). Becoming Indigenous: Land, belonging, and the appropriation of aboriginality in Canadian nationalist narratives. Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice, 42(2), 150 – 178.

Tuck, E., & Yang, K. W. (2012). Decolonization is not a metaphor. Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, 1(1), 1 – 40.

Vowel, C. (2016, May 10). Who are the Métis? Âpihtawikosisân. https://apihtawikosisan.com/2016/05/whoare-the-metis/

Whitlock, G. (2006). Active remembrance: Testimony, memoir, and the work of reconciliation. In A. E. Coombes (Ed.), Rethinking settler colonialism: History and memory in Australia, Canada, Aotearoa New Zealand, and South Africa (pp. 24 – 44). Manchester University Press.

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Publié

2023-04-01

Comment citer

Theorizing colonial culture in Canada: Consumption, Indigenization, and settler moves to innocence on a national scale. (2023). Canada Watch. https://doi.org/10.25071/k8gzd870