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Settler composite trajectories: Ann Curthoys, ‘From Montserrat to Settler-Colonial Australia: the Intersecting Histories of Caribbean Slave-owning Families, Transported British Radicals, and Indigenous Peoples’, History Workshop Journal, 2020

09Aug20

Abstract: When the British government abolished slavery in the Caribbean and compensated the slave-owners, some of the beneficiaries and/or their children and grandchildren went to Australia to make a new life and if possible a new fortune. This essay traces the history of one such family, the Shiells of Montserrat, alongside two other contemporaneous histories – that of Yorkshire radical and convict, John Burkinshaw, and his family, into which one of the Shiells married, and that of the several Indigenous communities these families encountered. Through the experiences of these disparate and intersecting family groups, we can gain insight into both the lived experience and the wider imperial context of the expansion of Australian settler colonialism.


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Settler colonialism as a ‘Satanic plot’: Erin G. Carlston, ‘”An Inverted Eden”: Modernity and Anti-Modernism in D’Arcy Cresswell’s The Forest’, Modernist Cultures, 15, 3, 2020, pp. 341-353

09Aug20

Abstract: In 1952, D’Arcy Cresswell published a verse play, The Forest, set in New Zealand’s forested Southern Alps. In what Cresswell called a ‘tremendous defense of homosexuality’, The Forestdepicts a pair of gay male poets pitted against the archangel Lucifer and women, who are in league together to force men to work the land and thereby desacralize it. Cresswell argues that the pressures on Pākehā men to be economically productive and heterosexually reproductive are manifestations of a literally Satanic plot to alienate men from one another and Nature. While many of Cresswell’s New Zealand literary contemporaries espoused a Pākehā masculinity involving matey comradeship and a life spent working the land, Cresswell celebrates a New Zealand wilderness he perceives as the last refuge of male love and inspired poetry. Simultaneously queering Milton, inverting Judeo-Christian history by relocating Eden in the Antipodes, and reversing New Zealand history by undoing the modernity that settler colonialism had created, Cresswell counters the terms of his own exclusion from the literary canon by imagining a world upside-down – and inside-out.


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Settler lawfare and its limits: Bain Attwood, ‘The Limits of the Law in Claiming Rights to Land in a Settler Colony: South Australia in the Early-to-Mid Nineteenth Century’, Law and History Review, 2020

09Aug20

Abstract: In the closing decades of the twentieth century, as indigenous peoples in the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand increasingly filed legal suits to regain their lands or win compensation for lands that they had lost, scholars increasingly devoted themselves to the task of explaining the ways in which European powers had laid claim to indigenous people’s territories across the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries. Their research invariably emphasized the role of the law. This was true not only of legal scholars but of intellectual and cultural historians as well. For example, Patricia Seed asserted that the law was central to all European claims of possession in the New World, because it was “the means by which states created their legitimacy.” Most of these scholars argued that particular legal doctrines that were formulated in metropolitan Europe dictated the terms on which imperial powers claimed indigenous people’s lands at the peripheries. More particularly, it became commonplace for these scholars to argue that a doctrine called terra nulliuswas especially important in this regard.


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Sociology discovers the settlers: Dwanna L. McKay, Kirsten Vinyeta, Kari Marie Norgaard, ‘Theorizing race and settler colonialism within U.S. sociology’, Sociology Compass, 2020

09Aug20

Abstract: Settler colonialism expands race and racism beyond ideological perspectives and reveals the links between historical and contemporary racialized social relations and practices–the racial structure–of American society. In this article, we define settler colonialism, highlight sociological scholarship that uses settler colonial theoretical frameworks, and explore ways in which this work enriches, intersects with, complicates, and contradicts key assumptions within the sociology of race.


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Composting settlers: Kristen B. French, Amy Sanchez, Eddy Ullom, ‘Composting Settler Colonial Distortions: Cultivating Critical Land-Based Family History’, Genealogy, 4, 84, 2020

09Aug20

Abstract: A collective of three intergenerational and intersectional educators engage in anti-colonial and/or decolonial processes of composting colonial distortions through Land-based conceptualizations of Critical Family History. Engaging in spiral discourse through Critical Personal Narratives, the authors theorize critical family history, Land-based learning, and Indigenous decolonial and anti-settler colonial frameworks. Using a process of unsettling reflexivity to analyze and interrupt settler colonial logics, the authors share their storied journeys, lessons learned and limitations for the cultivation of Critical Land-based Family History.


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It’s emotional (on triangular relations in a settler colonial context): Jane Lydon, Imperial Emotions: The Politics of Empathy across the British Empire, Cambridge University Press, 2019

07Aug20

Description: Emotions are not universal, but are experienced and expressed in diverse ways within different cultures and times. This overview of the history of emotions within nineteenth-century British imperialism focuses on the role of the compassionate emotions, or what today we refer to as empathy, and how they created relations across empire. Jane Lydon examines how empathy was produced, qualified and contested, including via the fear and anger aroused by frontier violence. She reveals the overlooked emotional dimensions of relationships constructed between Britain, her Australasian colonies, and Indigenous people, showing that ideas about who to care about were frequently drawn from the intimate domestic sphere, but were also developed through colonial experience. This history reveals the contingent and highly politicised nature of emotions in imperial deployment. Moving beyond arguments that emotions such as empathy are either ‘good’ or ‘bad’, this study evaluates their concrete political uses and effects.


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The traces of indigenous history: Tiina Äikäs, Anna-Kaisa Salmi (eds), The Sound of Silence: Indigenous Perspectives on the Historical Archaeology of Colonialism, Berghahn, 2019

07Aug20

Description: Colonial encounters between indigenous peoples and European state powers are overarching themes in the historical archaeology of the modern era, and postcolonial historical archaeology has repeatedly emphasized the complex two-way nature of colonial encounters. This volume examines common trajectories in indigenous colonial histories, and explores new ways to understand cultural contact, hybridization and power relations between indigenous peoples and colonial powers from the indigenous point of view. By bringing together a wide geographical range and combining multiple sources such as oral histories, historical records, and contemporary discourses with archaeological data, the volume finds new multivocal interpretations of colonial histories.


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Settlers take more than land: Keolu Fox, ‘The Illusion of Inclusion — The “All of Us” Research Program and Indigenous Peoples’ DNA’, New England Journal of Medicine, 383, 2020 pp. 411-413

05Aug20

Excerpt: Many Indigenous populations have been geographically isolated for tens of thousands of years. Over time, these populations have developed adaptations to their environments that have left specific variant signatures in their genomes. As a result, the genomes of Indigenous peoples are a treasure trove of unexplored variation. Some of this variation will inevitably be identified by programs like the National Institutes of Health (NIH) “All of Us” research program. NIH leaders have committed to the idea that at least 50% of this program’s participants should be members of underrepresented minority populations, including U.S. Indigenous communities (Native Americans, Alaskan Natives, and Native Hawaiians), a decision that explicitly connects diversity with the program’s goal of promoting equal enjoyment of the future benefits of precision medicine.

But there are reasons to believe that this promise may be an illusion. 


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Settler, unconscious: Zachary Samuel Gottesman, ‘The Japanese settler unconscious: Goblin Slayer on the “Isekai” frontier’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2020

05Aug20

Abstract: This paper looks at recent isekai (‘different world’) anime in relation to 2018s Goblin Slayer. It argues the latter is a settler-colonialist critique of the unconscious structural violence within former’s tropes and presumptions. Isekai anime provide a space where superexploitation and the redistribution of surplus value are buried within a fantasy of non-alienated, non-commodified labor, and Goblin Slayer represents the exhaustion of this fantasy and the return of the repressed unconscious of settler violence on the frontier. Using Patrick Wolfe’s theorization of a neoliberal settler-colonialism, this paper argues that Japanese settler-colonialism is not a primitive form of capitalism or a historical episode shed by postcolonialism but a contemporary mode of production that coexists alongside imperialism. Through an analysis of the historiography of the Japanese Empire, this paper constructs a general theory of settler-colonialism that situates Japan at the forefront of the late capitalist world system, anime as the system’s cultural representation, and otakudom as its labor regime. Finally, it asks what lies beyond the settler-colonialist critique and the space Goblin Slayer opens up against its own ideological limitations.


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Rights are not stakes (they are owned whole): Peter Nicholas Pomart, ‘Reframing Indigenous Peoples from Stakeholders to Rightsholders’, Proceedings of the Academy of Management, 2020, 1

05Aug20

Abstract: The right of Indigenous peoples to provide or withhold consent in relation to development projects on or adjacent to their ancestral lands has been affirmed and articulated in international human rights instruments in recent decades, most recently iterated in the 2007 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). In response to the UNDRIP, a number of industries have developed consultation protocols that are not only inconsistent with FPIC characteristics by conflating the unique rights of Indigenous peoples as equivalent to other stakeholder interests. By so doing, these protocols may actually be the source of resistance to development projects. Simultaneously, management literature has sought to understand the right to FPIC from the lens of stakeholder management procedures and social license to operate. Drawing from literature in law, and expert opinion from the United Nations Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, this paper seeks to explain why Indigenous peoples continue to oppose resource development projects, while also offering a human rights-based paradigm with which FPIC may be understood by reframing Indigenous peoples as rights-holders rather than conventional stakeholders.


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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

    • The bugBear of settler colonialism: Yung-Ying Chang, John Chung-En Liu, ‘The Formosan Black Bear and Taiwanese Nationalism’, Nations and Nationalism, 2026
    • The settler equation: P. L. Krapivsky, ‘Riviera model with egoistical settlers’, arXiv, 2026
    • It’s settler colonialism, actually: Marije van Lankveld, Laura M. De Vos, ‘We Are Not Protecting “the Environment”: Unist’ot’en Pipeline Resistance as Resistance against Settler Colonialism’, in Frank Mehring (ed.), The Environment in Sustainable American Studies, Routledge, 2026
    • Settler colonial Carthago delenda est! Dominic Machado, Michael J. Taylor, ‘The Carthaginian Masters: Settler Colonialism and Racecraft in Ancient North Africa’, Arethusa, 59, 2, 2026
    • The painful making of territory is a settler colonial conjuncture: Benedikt Korf, Michael Watts, ‘At the edge of the sword: Toward a spatial theory of the frontier’, Dialogues in Human Geography, 2026
    • The settler colonial hell of psychoanalysis: Martin Kemp, ‘Iterations of Hell: Settler Colonialism as Societal Abuse’, International Journal of Applied Psychoanalytic Studies, 23, 2, 2026
    • The book of settlers: Stephen B. Chapman, ‘Joshua, Violence, and Settler Colonialism’, in Lissa M. Wray Beal, Craig A. Evans, D. Allen Hutchison (eds), The Book of Joshua: Composition, Reception, and Interpretation, Brill, 2026, pp. 404-423
    • The novel settlers: Porscha Fermanis, Settler Fiction from the Southern Hemisphere, 1820-1890: Race In Nineteenth-Century Literatures And Cultures, Oxford University Press, 2026
    • Even more ancient settler indigenising: Cecily Devereux, ‘Eugenic maternalism and the figure of the ‘Indian maiden’ in young women’s organizations: the Wauneita Society and the Camp Fire Girls’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2026
    • Iron Maiden’s settler indigenising: Karen Fournier, ‘Asserting the Missing Indigenous Voice in “Run to the Hills”: Iron Maiden (1982); Tanya Tagaq and Damian Abraham (2018)’, in Mike Alleyne, Lori Burns (eds), The Routledge Handbook to the Popular Music Cover Song, Routledge, 2026
    • Indigeneous AUTONOMY: Shane Barter, ‘Towards Indigenous Territorial Autonomy in Asia’, TRaNS: Trans-Regional and -National Studies of Southeast Asia, 2026
    • Settler colonialism on display: Emma Catherine Nagler, Settling the Past: Affect, Display, and the Colonial Uncanny, PhD dissertation, Georgetown University, 2026
    • Resisting for sport: Jordan Koch, Robert Henry, Sam McKegney, ‘From locker rooms to change rooms: The Beardy’s Blackhawks and transformative hockey spaces’, International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 2026
    • The settler revolution’s global retreat: Aziz Rana, ‘The American Revolution in Global Retreat’, Dissent, 73, 2, 2026, pp. 7-17
    • Settler bots: Bronwyn Carlson, Tamika Worrell, ‘Robots Behaving Badly: Algorithmic Colonialism and the Consequences of AI’, Journal of Sociology, 2026
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