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« Performing decolonial relations: Olivia Heaney, ‘Renewable Relations in Make Muskrat Right’, Canadian Theatre Review, 2020
Oliver Baker, ‘Guns Don’t Kill People, Settlers Do: The Second Amendment and the Myth of Defense’, Pyriscence, 10/06/19 »

Performing decolonial relations II: Ken Wilson, ‘Wood Mountain Walk and the Possibilities of Decolonization through Relationships with People and Land in Solo Walking Performance’, Canadian Theatre Review, 2020

08Apr20

Abstract: In August 2018, Ken Wilson completed Wood Mountain Walk, the first in a series of walking performances he intends to conduct—some solo, some with other people—in Treaty 4 territory in southern Saskatchewan over the next two years. “Wood Mountain Walk and the Possibilities of Decolonization through Relationships with People and Land in Solo Walking Performance” examines the possibility that walking performance could open possibilities for decolonization by helping settlers begin developing non-extractive relationships with the land.

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  • Settler colonialism is a global and transnational phenomenon, and as much a thing of the past as a thing of the present. Settlers 'come to stay': they are founders of political orders who carry with them a distinct sovereign capacity.
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