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2005 Annual Meeting, Association of American Geographers
April 5-9, Denver, Colorado


Landscape and Epistemology: Reconciling Indigenous and Western Geographies in Academic Research II

Sponsorships: Indigenous Peoples Specialty Group

Description:

All societies produce geographic epistemologies rooted in their modes of production, environmental conditions, and understandings of their place in the universe. But since the Age of Exploration these been over-written by hegemonic Western discourse of space and time. This is to the detriment of both the acute environmental understandings and awareness produced by indigenous geographies, and the need for greater global understanding of non-Western societies in the post-9/11 world.

This problem is faced by all geography researchers in non-Western settings, especially for those working with indigenous peoples and for geographers of indigenous background who wish to understand their own 'indigenous geography' within the Western context. Indigenous science and geography tend to be holistic, understanding the world as flows of energy across permeable boundaries of matter and spirit. But the dominant capitalist system and modernist epistemology maintain a compartmentalized, materialist worldview that naturalizes the exploitation of nature for financial gain. Western geography, both a product and producer of this worldview, remains locked in this epistemological grid.

This is the second of two sessions considering how we, as geographers operating in the Western academy, deal with this seemingly irreconcilable difference of worldviews.

Organizer: RDK Herman
Chair: Brian J. Murton

Participants:

Chris R. Coggins
Mapping Shangri-La: Sacred Landscapes and Indigenous Epistemologies in the Sino-Tibetan Borderlands

Lesley Fordred Green
Modes of spatio-temporal memory on Karumna Mountain, Amapá, Brazil

Ian Greatbatch
Mountain Landscape Feature Naming: An Analysis of the English Lake District

Anna Stanley
Subjugated Knowledges: the continued production of colonial landscapes through Canadian nuclear waste management

Samantha Earnest
The Politics of Historic Preservation


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