May 15/16, 2020
Institute of Advanced Study, University of Warwick
This symposium explores North American Indigenous intellectual and
narrative traditions that were recovered, reclaimed, or (re-)invented in the
wake of Red Power movements that emerged in the 1960s in the settler colonial
societies of Canada and the USA. It asks: which new perspectives and visions
have been developed over the last 50 years within Indigenous studies and
related fields when looking at Indigenous land and land rights, Indigenous
political and social sovereignty, extractivism and environmental destruction,
oppressive sex/gender systems, and for describing the repercussions of settler
colonialism in North America, especially in narrative representations?
The symposium is guided by the idea that North American Indigenous
intellectual and narrative traditions developed and recovered since the 1960s
offer new and reclaimed ways of being, organizing, and thinking in the face of
destruction, dispossession, and oppression; Indigenous ways of writing and
righting are connected to ongoing social struggles for land rights, access to
clean water, and intellectual and socio-political sovereignty; they are, as
Maile Arvin, Eve Tuck, and Angie Morrill (2013) have pointed out, “a gift” from
which most academic disciplines can benefit greatly.
In the face of ongoing exploitations of Indigenous knowledges and
resources, it is paramount that researchers who focus on Indigenous
intellectual and narrative traditions, especially those who come from
settler-colonial backgrounds, carefully examine their implications in
settler-colonial ways of dispossession. It is in this context that the
symposium encourages self-reflectivity and invites participants from all
positionalities to include reflections on how to act, think, and write in a
non-appropriative manner about the intellectual achievements of Indigenous
academics, activists, artists from North America. What kind of challenges does
an engagement with Indigenous intellectual and narrative achievements from
North America pose, and how do these achievements enable their audience to
think differently and to develop visions that go beyond settler colonial hegemonies
that make themselves felt in customs, laws, property-relations, or gender
roles?
Possible topics include:
- North American Indigenous intellectual and narrative traditions that emerged or were rediscovered over the last 50 years;
- Indigenous representations of land and water, community-building, the other-than-human world;
- connections and frictions among and within different Indigenous traditions and/or settler societies in North America;
- Indigenous understandings of sex/gender;
- methodologies for reading across ethnic divides, alliance-building tools in academia and activism.
Please send your proposals (max. 300 words) plus a short bio (max. 150
words) to in_the_wake@outlook.com by March 15, 2020. You will be notified by
March 29, 2020, if your paper is accepted. For any questions, please refer to
the organizer Dr. Doro Wiese, IAS, University of Warwick.
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