Description: This collection brings together Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars and experts from Australia and beyond to examine the persistent settler-colonial patterns of denial, ignorance and antipathy that continue to constrain the possibilities of truth and justice in settler-colonial societies. Written from diverse cultural and disciplinary perspectives, the chapters identify and analyse the social, cultural and political barriers to listening, hearing, and responding on the part of settlers, and the settler state/s. Prompted by the unsuccessful 2023 referendum on an Indigenous Voice to Parliament and the constitutional recognition of the First Peoples of Australia as the First Peoples of Australia, the volume reorients the discussion. Rather than returning to questions of how truth-telling might be improved or made more persuasive, it shifts the focus towards the continuing refusal of settlers (and the settler state/s) to adequately and ethically engage with the truths that have already been told. The chapters investigate patterns of denial, deflection, and structural resistance, exposing their contradictions and points of vulnerability with the express aim of contributing to their undoing. While a number of contributions paint a sobering picture of the enduring impediments to meaningful change, others—particularly those from First Nations authors—highlight the continuing, generative, healing work of truth-telling and/as activism already underway. These contributions foreground the transformative potential of Indigenous-led truth-telling practices, not only as responses to settler inaction, but as active forces for reimagining and reshaping settler–Indigenous relations.


Abstract: The Living Prairie Museum (LPM) initially called the St. James Prairie Park, or the St. James-Assiniboia Living Prairie Museum is a tall grass prairie conservation area and park in Winnipeg established in 1976. It was set aside by municipal leaders to preserve an area that is home to a diverse range of prairie grasses and flowers which had been largely unaffected by agriculture or urban development. Its purpose is to promote conservation and preservation of tall grass prairie, increase ecological awareness and provide educational opportunities for teaching about the prairie ecosystem. For the past several decades, the LPM has hosted school field trips, community workshops, and educational programming designed to explain past prairie ecologies that endured for thousands of years before European colonization, industrialization, and urbanization. The 13-hectare preserve traces its roots back to the time of the Red River Settlement. A firm vision began to emerge during the interwar period, the more so in the post-Second World War era of urban expansion. It came to full fruition in 1976, four years after a number of small municipalities surrounding Winnipeg were incorporated into the City of Winnipeg. This article tells the stories of the key scientists, community members, and city councillors who were instrumental in identifying and preserving the LPM. Ultimately, it was the foresight of these key figures that safeguarded a beautifully preserved, albeit small, representation of what so much of Winnipeg and its surrounding area once was.



Abstract: The ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza is not only a humanitarian catastrophe but also a cultural one, marked by the systematic erasure of Palestinian identity, memory, and cultural heritage. This entry examines the destruction of Gaza through the lens of settler colonialism, tracing its roots to the early Zionist project and the violent establishment of the Israeli state. It argues that the dominant discourses on Gaza’s cultural heritage—centered on monumentality, pastness, and global relevance—fail to recognize the contemporary history of Palestine under Israeli settler colonialism, the lived cultural heritage of refugeeism, sumud (steadfastness), and Gaza’s cosmopolitan legacy. Drawing on settler colonial studies and cultural herita ge theory, the entry critiques how international heritage frameworks often replicate colonial values, overlooking the cultural and political agency embedded in refugee camps. These camps have become vital space s of memory work, resistance, and cultural production, embodying a cultural that challenges both local and global narratives. By foregrounding the cultural heritage of refugeeism, this work reveals how Palestinian sumud is not only a response to violence but also a form of cultural continuity, political expression, and resistance to dispossession. It calls for a rethinking of cultural heritage practices that center Indigenous experiences and confront the colonial foundations of cultural heritage discourse in the context of genocide.








Archives

stats for wordpress