« Making and Breaking Settler Space: Five Centuries of Colonization in North America »
Dans le cadre des activités du thème phare Antiracisme et décolonisation, on vous propose une discussion avec Adam Barker, autour de son livre Making and Breaking Settler Space: Five Centuries of Colonization in North America (UBC Press, 2021).
Pour y participer, voici le lien Zoom.
Résumé du livre
« Five hundred years. A vast geography. And an unfinished project to remake the world to match the desires of settler colonizers. How have settlers used violence and narrative to transform Turtle Island into what is currently called North America? What does that say about our social systems, and what happens next?
Deploying analytical tools from diverse disciplines, and drawing on sources ranging from archives to pop culture and personal experience, Making and Breaking Settler Space addresses pressing questions left by the complex and obscured process of colonization. Adam Barker articulates a dynamic analytical model to explain how settler spaces have developed and continue to evolve. He traces the trajectory of settler colonialism, drawing out details of its operation from the imperial colonization of Turtle Island in the 1500s to contemporary contexts that include problematic activist practices by would-be settler allies.
Making and Breaking Settler Space proposes an innovative, unified spatial theory of settler colonization in Canada and the United States. In the process, it uncovers systemic weaknesses that can inform the decolonization efforts of resurgent Indigenous nations and settler activists alike, and argues for relationships founded on solidarity and shared acknowledgment that the settler project is a failed one.
This thought-provoking work will be of great use not only to scholars and students of settler colonialism but also to activists and political commentators concerned with Indigenous people’s future beyond the settler colonial society. »
Biographie de l’auteur
Adam Barker holds a PhD in Human Geographer from the University of Leicester, and currently works as a research assistant in the Department of Geography at the University of Sheffield. He is a settler Canadian originally from the Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabe territories near Hamilton, Ontario, and has published works on settler colonialism and social change in journals such as Social Movement Studies and the Annals of the AAG. He frequently works with his partner, historian and sociologist Emma Battell Lowman, with whom he co-authored the book Settler: Colonialism and Identity in 21st Century Canada (Fernwood Press, 2015).