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2006 Annual Meeting, Association of American Geographers
March 7-11, Chicago Illinois


4439 Colonialism and Place in Settler Colonies: Indigenous Agency and the Construction of Nature in the Contact Zone

Friday, 3/10/06, from 2:00 PM - 3:40 PM

Session Description:
One of the characteristics of modernity has always been its' autocentric image of itself as the expression of universal certainty. This is nowhere more apparent than in discussions about Nature, where the impact and contributions of regions beyond 'Europe' have barely begun to enter scholarly awareness. Among geographers some preliminary attempts have been made to recognize Indigenous agency, either through a focus on the role that Indigenous knowledge can play in resource management, or through the recognition of a Native presence in textual analyses of narratives of exploration and scientific discovery. Our interest here is to examine how the Native, both informant and scholar, can be re/placed within this construction of Nature, ending a temporal, spatial and textual dis/placement which has denied the agency of Indigenous voices within discussions of Nature, other than as a bounded category called 'Indigenous Knowledge'. This dis/placement of Indigenous voices came at a moment in time when Western thought was dichotomizing (nature from culture, space from place, etc.) creating separations and uneven relationships between the dualisms. In this paper session we intend to begin healing the separation and uneven relationship between culture and nature through papers that re/place the Native voice within constructions of Nature in the 'contact zones', both historical and contemporary.

Organizer(s):
Jay T. Johnson - University of Canterbury
Brian J. Murton - University of Hawaii

Chair(s):
Jay T. Johnson - University of Canterbury

Papers:

2:00 PM Author(s): Brian J. Murton - University of Hawaii
Abstract Title: 'Ghostly Presences': The Possibility of Native Agency and 'Scientific Information' Transfer in Early Nineteenth Century Aotearoa/New Zealand

2:20 PM Author(s): Jay T. Johnson, PhD - University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Abstract Title: Re/placing Native science: Indigenous voices in contemporary constructions of nature.

2:40 PM Author(s): Kamanamaikalani Beamer - University of Hawai'i
T. Kaeo Duarte, Ph.D. - University of Hawai'i
Abstract Title: Hawaiian Kingdom Mapping: A Colonial Venture?

3:00 PM Author(s): Da-Wei Kuan - UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII
Abstract Title: Re-imaging Nature: A Critical Review of the Transiting Human-River Relationship in Indigenous Maliqwan River Valley, Taiwan

3:20 PM Author(s): Matthew Schnurr - University of British Columbia
Abstract Title: Irrigated Cotton as a Means of Teasing Apart Settler and Native Agricultural Space in KwaZulu, South Africa, 1930-1948.

 

Back to Indigenous Peoples sessions, 2006 annual meeting of the Association of American Geographers

 


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