Results 31 to 40 of about 607 (108)

Revisiting Distant Relations

open access: yesGenealogy, 2021
In 2000, I published Distant Relations: How My Ancestors Colonized North America, a non-fiction exploration of my own family’s involvement in North American colonialism from the 1600s to the present.
Victoria Freeman
doaj   +1 more source

Feeling Seen: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander LGBTIQ+ Peoples, (In)Visibility, and Social-Media Assemblages

open access: yesGenealogy, 2021
This article explores shifting social arrangements on social media as experienced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, intersex, and queer (LGBTIQ+) peoples.
Andrew Farrell
doaj   +1 more source

THINKING WITH PAINT: TROUBLING SETTLER COLONIALISMS THROUGH EARLY CHILDHOOD ART PEDAGOGIES

open access: yesInternational Journal of Child, Youth & Family Studies, 2015
  In this paper we think with the specificities of paint to tell stories about entanglements of settler colonialism and paint and painting in early childhood art education.
Vanessa Clark   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

Performing Settler-Colonialism [PDF]

open access: yesZeitschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik, 2020
AbstractThis essay brings together conceptualizations of populism in political science with those in literary and cultural studies. Theater historian Elizabeth Maddock Dillon’s theory of a »performative commons« (from 1649 through 1849) are applied to three US-American nineteenth-century plays.
openaire   +1 more source

Settler Colonialism a Persevering Injustice, The Responsibility to Contest it, and Settler Allies’ Use of Media to Disseminate a Competing Discourse: The Case of Asinabka

open access: yesFrench Journal for Media Research, 2017
Colonialism may seem a thing of the past, harking back images of European powers in Asia or Africa.  However, colonialism perseveres, particularly in the form of settler colonialism in states like Canada and Australia.
Kawatra L.K.
doaj  

Beyond Settler Colonialism [PDF]

open access: yesJournal of Early American History, 2019
This paper offers a critical reflection on the appropriateness of ‘settler colonialism’ as an analytic category for understanding the political dynamics of early America. It argues that the paradigm’s focus on the elimination of the native obscures the resilience of Indian power, and the mechanisms by which that power was exercised and defended.
openaire   +2 more sources

Thinking with Melissa Gniadek and Beenash Jafri

open access: yesLateral, 2017
Response to Melissa Gniadek and Beenash Jafri on original essay by J Kēhaulani Kauanui, "A Structure, Not an Event: Settler Colonialism and Enduring Indigeneity," published in Lateral 5.1.
J Kēhaulani Kauanui
doaj   +1 more source

Settler Colonialism by Settlers of Color: Understanding Han Taiwanese Settler Colonialism in Taiwan through Japanese American Settler Colonialism in Hawai’i

open access: yesAsian American Research Journal, 2022
My paper evaluates the United States settler colonial framework in relation to Han Taiwanese citizenship, independence, and rights to the island now called Taiwan. I use parallels from the Japanese American occupation of Hawai'i to investigate how white settler colonial logics, such as multiculturalism and the settler-colonial Unconscious, are ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Settler colonialism or a hybrid case? Dimensions of colonization in Cyprus and Turkish Cypriot–settler antagonism

open access: yesInternational Journal of Anthropology and Ethnology
This article explores the colonization of northern Cyprus by Turkey after the 1974 war through the analytical lens of settler colonialism. Drawing on comparative frameworks, it investigates whether Cyprus represents a classical case of settler ...
Nikos Moudouros
doaj   +1 more source

Exploring activist perspectives on Indigenous-settler solidarity in Toronto’s food sovereignty movement

open access: yesCanadian Food Studies
While food movements have increasingly taken up the framework of Indigenous food sovereignty in their work, settler food activists continue to define food systems on stolen lands. In this article, we explore whether and how food activists in Toronto are
Taliya Seidman-Wright, Sarah Rotz
doaj   +1 more source

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