racialized ecologies in and beyond settler-colonial canada: documentary, speculative, and poetic texts and contexts
the project is part of the recent shift in environmental justice literary and cultural study to consider how large-scale atmospheric, planetary, and geological dimensions of anthropogenic environmental change can be read as registers of the racial formations of the modern world. we propose that a racial-justice-framed, extended temporal-geopolitical scale for understanding environmental crises through historicization presents a new role for cultural studies research in canada: to examine the longue durée material socio-ecological relations through which ecological transformation has been shaped by the racial formations of settler-colonial canada as revealed within cultural texts and the contexts of their production and circulation. the project will study how three aesthetic modes--the poetic, the documentary, and the speculative--are used by indigenous, black, latinx, and asian-diasporic writers, filmmakers and artists to grapple with and change debilitating political ecologies and how these political ecologies are made in conjunction with settler-colonial policies and racialized management of resources, land, labour, and migration in four periods of the canadian nation-building project.
research team:
dr. cheryl lousley (lakehead), primary investigator
dr. tania aguila-way (toronto), dr. renae watchman (mcmaster), dr. anita girvan (ubc okanagan), dr. susie o’brien (mcmaster), dr. nandini thiyagarajan (acadia), dr. joanne leow (simon fraser).
dr. zishad lak (lakehead), postdoctoral fellow
research assistants:
sarah terry (english, lakehead)
isabella swender (social justice studies, lakehead)