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« Arid settler colonialism: Natalie Koch, Arid Empire: The Entangled Fates of Arizona and Arabia, Verso, 2023
Animals and humans on a settler colonial frontier: Lauren Cullen, ‘Animal–Human Entanglements in the Canadian Wild Animal Stories of Charles G. D. Roberts’, in Alex Goody, Saskia McCracken (eds), Beastly Modernisms: The Figure of the Animal in Modernist Literature and Culture, Edinburgh University Press, 2023, pp. 181-197 »

Even the NYT now thinks about settler colonialism! Jennifer Schuessler, ‘What Is “Settler Colonialism”?’, New York Times, 22/01/24

23Jan24

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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.
  • 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

    • Settlers see predators: Dominik Ohrem, ‘”Ineradicably ferocious”: settler colonialism and the predatory imagination in nineteenth-century U.S. culture’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2026
    • What underwrites settler ‘hospitality’? Michael Palkowski, ‘The Riviera of the Middle East: Gaza, Donald Trump and hospitality discourses of imperialism’, Hospitality & Society, 2026
    • Settler frontiers are planning opportunities: Rachel Gallagher, ‘Urban planning as a settler colonial tool: land, control and extractive settlement on the Queensland (Australia) frontier’, Space and Polity, 2026
    • Settler states out of the borderlands: Patrick Thomas Forde, Forging the Borderlands: Sovereignty, Conflict, and State Formation West of the Great Lakes, 1860s-1870s, MA dissertation, University of Calgary, 2026
    • Indigenous phoenix rising: Maya Mikdashi, ‘Archives, Prophecy, and Return: The Phoenix of Gaza’, Journal of Palestine Studies, 2026
    • Settlers crying wolf: Tandeep Sidhu, McKenzie Duguay, Amy Graham, Merissa Daborn, ‘Ghosts on the “Frontier”: Interrogating the Possessive Logic of Wolf Killing’, Sociology Compass, 20, 7, 2026, #e70221
    • Anne’s settler colonialism: Donny Syofyan, ‘From “Street Arab” to Scholar: Negotiating the Status of the Orphan in Late Victorian Canadian Literature’, Krinok, 10, 1, 2026, pp. 26-35
    • Internal and settler colonialisms: Upasana Bibha, Agustin Laó-Montes, ‘The Multiple Lives of Internal Colonialism’, Sociological Forum, 2026
    • Settler environmentalism is childish: Anastasia Murney, ‘Australian property is theft: environmentalism and settler- colonialism in children’s television’, Continuum, 2026
    • The settler’s hill: Maya Charlton, “On This Very Hill”: Narratives of Conquest in Willa Cather’s A Lost Lady, PhD dissertation, Leigh University, 2026
    • Even self-colonisation requires an Indigenous other! Kosuke Shimizu, ‘Eurocentrism and the construction of the ‘self’ in colonialism: The Okinawa–Japan relationality’, Political Studies Review, 2026
    • The settler colonial limit of acceptability: Mark Mallory, ‘The Names of Four Scouts: Slavery, Settler Colonialism, and the Limits of Incorporation at the Texas Capitol Complex since 1983’, Journal of Texas History, 2, 1, 2026, #4
    • Environmental resistance against settler colonialism: Holly Randell-Moon (ed.), Environments of power: Vibrant terrain and landscapes of resistance, Manchester University Press, 2026
    • Gendered settler colonialism: Lihi Ben Shitrit, Idan Chazan, ‘Demographic Anxieties of Jewish Sovereignty: Palestinian Women’s Bodies in Israeli Annexation Politics’, Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society, 2026
    • Poetic fragmentation against settler mythscapes: Doro Wiese, ‘Unsettling Coloniality: Opaque White Space in the Cut-Up Poetry of Jordan Abel’s (Nisga’a) Un/Inhabited’, English Studies, 2026
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