Exhuming settler colonialism: Cailín E. Murray, ‘Bodies, Artifacts and Ghosts: NAGPRA, Ceremonies of Repossession and the Unsettling of Settler Colonialism’, in Charles Stewart, Stephan Palmie (eds), The Varieties of Historical Experience, Routledge, 2019
29Mar19
Access the chapter here.
Filed under: Uncategorized | Closed
- If you're a scholar, and you find some of your work featured on the blog, then chances are that we want it for our journal.
-
what’s new
- Monumental settlers: Cynthia Prescott, Nathan Rees, Rebecca Weaver-Hightower, ‘Enshrining Gender in Monuments to Settler Whiteness: South Africa’s Voortrekker Monument and the United States’ This Is the Place Monument’, Humanities, 10, 1, 2021
- Identifying settler fragilities: Kaitlyn Watson, Sandra Jeppesen, ‘Settler Fragility: Four Paradoxes of Decolonizing Research’, RCD, 2021
- Identifying settler pedagogies: Shaista Aziz Patel, ‘Talking complicity, breathing coloniality: Interrogating settler-centric pedagogy of teaching about white settler colonialism’, Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
- Settler heritage is on Indigenous lands: Robert Coutts, Authorized Heritage: Place, Memory, and Historic Sites in Prairie Canada, University of Manitoba Press, 2021
- Zionism and other colonialisms: Dekel Peretz, Zionism and Cosmopolitanism: Franz Oppenheimer and the Dream of a Jewish Future in Germany and Palestine, De Gruyter, 2021
- Settler infrastructures include ideology: Paul J Guernsey, ‘The infrastructures of White settler perception: A political phenomenology of colonialism, genocide, ecocide, and emergency’, Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space, 2021
- Settler colonialism includes rape: Kathryn Medien, ‘Israeli settler colonialism, “humanitarian warfare”, and sexual violence in Palestine’, International Feminist Journal of Politics, 2021
- Settler colonialism is embodied: Tricia McGuire-Adams, ‘”This is what I heard at Naicatchewenin”: Disrupting embodied settler colonialism’, Journal of Indigenous Wellbeing, 6, 1, 2021
- Settler masculinities on display: Matthew L. Basso, ‘Settler masculinity and labour: the post-pioneer era gender order and New Zealand’s Great Strike of 1913’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2021
- Settlers and their literatures: Camilla Cassidy, ‘Review of Fariha Shaikh, Nineteenth-Century Settler Emigration in British Literature and Art; Philip Steer, Settler Colonialism in Victorian Literature: Economics and Political Identity in the Networks of Empire’, Victoriographies, 11, 1, 2021
- Indigeneity and ‘nature’: Michael T. Schmitt, Scott D. Neufeld, Stephanie A. Fryberg, Glenn Adams, Jodi L. Viljoen, Lyana Patrick, Clifford Gordon Atleo, Sheri Fabian, ‘”Indigenous” Nature Connection? A Response to Kurth, Narvaez, Kohn, and Bae (2020)’, Ecopsychology, 2021
- Indigenous workers have international rights: David Meren, ‘Safeguarding Settler Colonialism in Geneva: Canada, Indigenous Rights, and ilo Convention No. 107 on the Protection and Integration of Indigenous Peoples (1957)’, The Canadian Historical Review, 2021
- Indigenous settler colonialists: Andrew Shaler, ‘The Cherokee and Wyandot Companies on the Overland Trails to California: Histories of Indigenous Migration and the Settler Gaze, 1849–1856’, The Journal of the Civil War Era, 11, 1, 2021, pp. 9-35
- Containing settler colonialism: Gabrielle Moser, ‘Settler colonialism’s container technologies: photographing crates in the Canadian Arctic (1926–1953)’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2021
- Homeless, Indigenous, Forgotten (not): E. Ornelas, ‘Settler Colonial Memory and Agamben’s Camp in Indigenous Minnesota’, International Journal of Critical Indigenous Studies, 13, 2, 2020
contribute