Archive for October, 2022
Mnemonics against settler colonialism: Siddhant Issar, ‘Unsettling the Politics of Race: Kevin Bruyneel’s Settler Memory‘, Theory & Event, 25, 4, 2022, pp. 954-958
Excerpt: Why were liberals incensed by Rachel Dolezal masquerading as Black but relatively untroubled by Elizabeth Warren’s claim to Cherokee ancestry? How does the anti-racist Left’s ritual rendition and interpretation of Bacon’s Rebellion and Radical Reconstruction constrain an adequate understanding of white supremacy in the US? In what ways is the election of Donald Trump […]
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Abstract: The search for justice in Aotearoa New Zealand will depend, in part, on how we contend with and overcome the settler-colonial situation—in a word, it will be based on the struggle for decolonisation. This thesis aims to show how epistemic goals and hermeneutical practices are not incidental, but intrinsic to such political struggles. Focusing […]
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Philosphy against settler colonialism: Adam Y. Stern, ‘Theses on the Philosophy of Survival’, Theory & Event, 25, 4, 2022, pp. 804-828
Abstract: Beginning with Walter Benjamin’s famous essay, “Theses on the Philosophy of History,” this paper unfolds a supplementary set of theses on the genealogy of a different concept (survival) and different figure (the survivor). Benjamin’s distinction between the “victor” and the “angel” serves as a binary framework for an understanding of the philosophical legacy of survival […]
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Abstract: This is part two of a series of two papers exploring a project was conducted by two Australian Aboriginal researchers, one male and one female, and might be described as ‘reverse anthropology’, in the same way that people sometimes refer to positive discrimination as ‘reverse racism’. But we would just call it anthropology; a […]
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Abstract: Commission (MWTRC) is one of the more recent examples of the truth and reconciliation model being used in a settler colonial context. This article argues that the MWTRC highlighted a historical and continued refusal by Wabanaki people to ongoing systems of white settler violence especially in the form of Native child welfare. Examining the […]
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Urban settler colonialisms: Nathan McClintock, Stéphane Guimont Marceau, ‘Settler-colonial urbanisms: convergences, divergences, limits, contestations’, Urban Geography, 2022
Abstract: The past few years have seen a groundswell of geographic scholarship on settler colonialism and its manifold articulations with the urban, from the historical development of cities to ongoing logics and practices of colonization and resistance alike. Given this growing attention to “settler-colonial urbanism” – as well as concerns that a focus thereupon risks […]
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Architectural settler colonialism: Robert Flahive, ‘Settler colonialism within the settler state: remaking the past through the built environment in Casablanca’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2022
Abstract: This paper frames Morocco as a settler state in order to map how the structural logic of settler colonialism persists through the transformation of the built environment in contemporary Casablanca. Rather than focus on commonly-referenced settler states, such as Israel or America, this paper analyzes Morocco, where formal decolonization occurred through the end of […]
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Abstract: This article provides a comprehensive overview of Israeli green colonialism, denoting the apartheid state’s misappropriation of environmentalism to eliminate the Indigenous people of Palestine and usurp its resources. I focus on the violence of ‘protected areas’, encompassing national parks, forests, and nature reserves. This article argues that Israel primarily establishes them to (1) justify […]
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Abstract: The settler-society myth of the “wasteful” Native Americans, who exterminated the Pleistocene megafauna and drove millions of buffalo over cliffs, persists in spite of criticism. The present book must include some debunking of this myth. Native American stories make it clear that overhunting did occur and was recognized; it was also stopped when it […]
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Abstract: Storytelling and the Subsurface concerns the relationship between Indigenous land and the generation of energy. Specifically, it reads contemporary literature as responsive to the enormous economic growth of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Under the dispossessive structure of settler colonialism, exponential growth has a particular bearing on Indigenous peoples, whose lands are […]
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