La Paperson begins “A Ghetto Land Pedagogy: An Antidote for Settler Environmentalism” with a road map. First, Paperson says, “I analyze an Urban Ecology lesson as an illustration of how settler environmentalism employs the logic of terra sacer, or sacred/accursed land, to describe ghettos as wastelands ripe for rescue by ecological settlers” (115). Then, Paperson considers the Occupy movement “as settler signifier for social justice, an extension of the settler pursuit of land” (115). After that, the essay considers land in the San Francisco Bay area (115). “In contrast to place as a site of settler belonging and identity, this discussion heeds Goeman’s (2013) call to think through ‘storied land’ as an antidote to settler colonial vanishing,” Paperson writes. “Storied land offers a method of land education, by extending critical cartography’s spatial analysis with a temporal analysis implied by Indigenous struggle and Black resistance: the when of land, not just the where of place” (115). “A ghetto land pedagogy thus attends to an analysis of settler colonialism, offers a critique of settler environmentalism, and forwards a decolonizing cartography as a method for land education,” Paperson writes (115).
The essay’s first section begins with a paragraph discussing urban planner Robert Moses as an epitome of settler colonialism’s evolution, because his highway network “laid waste to Black and working class neighbourhoods” in New York City (116). “Ghetto colonialism is a specialization of settler colonialism in North America,” Paperson writes (116). It “takes place at this intersection between Indigenous displacement and black dislocation” because of the way that settler colonialism (in the United States and other locations where slavery was a central part of the economy) divides people into three groups: white settlers entitled to the land, Indigenous people who must be removed from the land, and black people who are chattel slaves (116). “For settlers seeking new frontiers, the ghetto serves as an interior frontier to be laid waste in order to renew,” Paperson continues. “It is a terra sacer, doubling as sacred and accursed land, a murderable nonplace always available for razing and resettlement” (116). Paperson is drawing on the work of Giorgio Agamben’s discussion of homo sacer here (116). Indigenous land is the exterior frontier of imperialism, and the ghetto is its interior frontier: “the outcast, the alley and the underground” (116). According to Paperson, “[s]ettler colonial eyes see the ghetto as sacred wasteland that may be re-inhabited by anybody, with impunity” (117). This argument would be clearer if Paperson explored the way that land is both sacred and accursed simultaneously, rather than just mentioning Agamben’s use of the Latin term sacer. Sometimes an argument needs to slow down and engage with its audience in a more deliberate fashion.
For Paperson, “[t]erra sacer is a virulent variation of the settler colonial ideology of terra nullius, the colonial fiction of ‘empty land’ or ‘land not legally belonging to anyone. Nullius is the justification for the doctrine of discovery: that one can stab a flag into the earth or a needle into a person’s tissue and claim a colony” (117). The leap from a beach in the Caribbean in 1492 to the appropriation of genetic material without consent is a big one, but perhaps both are aspects of the same phenomenon. Terra nullius “is the founding covenant for settler colonial states” (117)—and it’s the basis of the Crown’s claim to ownership over land in Canada. However, as Paperson notes, land is usually not empty; instead, it must be made empty by declaring its inhabitants uncivilized and thus unworthy of the land they own (117).
“The duality of land as desecrated, in pain, in need of rescue; and land as sacred, wild, and preserve-able; are contemporary discourses that justify re-invasion,” Paperson contends. “They collapse Native land and black space together, leading once again to re-settlement” (117). Settlers come to see themselves as ecological stewards, worthy of reinhabiting a rehabilitated land (117). “In this ecological dystopia, Indigenous Americans are largely extinct through regrettable genocide, or survive spectrally through the settler’s Indian heart,” Paperson continues. “Terra sacer is a proxy for settler humanity; like the land, settlers view them/ourselves as traumatized yet healable. This is the settler adoption fantasy . . . that they/we can adopt the land and be adopted by the land” (117). I’m not sure how the idea of terra sacer ends up being a projection of the settler’s self, or how it is an adoption fantasy; again, Paperson needs to be a little more methodical in explicating these ideas. Paperson refers to the essay “Decolonization Is Not a Metaphor” here, in which Tuck and Yang disqualify settlers from any relationship to the land beyond exploitation and unjust occupation. That essay one of the most frustrating and hopeless things I’ve read, and to be honest, if Tuck and Yang are right, then there’s no point in my research at all—it is doomed to fail, it is pointless, it is worse than useless. That essay leaves no place for settlers to do anything other than unjustly occupy Indigenous land. Perhaps that’s accurate; perhaps it’s an overstatement.
The “ecological destruction that has accompanied settler colonialism” has been critiqued: “environmental racism,” “‘nature’ as rape-able,” and “‘development’ as the normalized aim of modernity” have all been critiqued (117). However, those critiques “can miss the core of Indigenous relationships to lands and communities, particularly the complex relationships between urban Indigenous land and life, not to mention between Indigenous, Black, and ghettoized communities” (117). In addition, environmentalism “has been largely silent on land, that is, silent on the settler colonial recasting of land into ‘environment,’ and silent on broader Indigenous understandings of land as ancestor, as sovereign, as people-places with their own politics and identities” (117-18). I’m reminded of the ways that the creation of national parks in Canada involved the expulsion of the Indigenous people living in those places, or of recent reports suggesting that biodiversity is higher on lands managed by Indigenous peoples (see Swiderska).
Here Paperson critiques the teaching of urban ecology at an Oakland high school as an example of “pain curriculum” that sets the stage “for a performance of environmentalist rescue” because it described “the negative consequences of the automobile” (118). I don’t know what to make of that. Does Paperson think the automobile has no negative consequences? Or that students shouldn’t learn about what making the automobile the centre of our transportation infrastructure has done to us or to our planet? The alternatives—public transit and cycling—“worked differently for white cosmopolitans than for ghettoized peoples” in the structure of the lesson, which taught a “metanarrative” within its “cartography of Oakland’s places and peoples”: “Downtown matters. Commuters count” (120). “Indeed, this urban ecology unit invited students to participate in their own disappearance: lend your voice to fixing the ghetto wasteland by paving bikeways and funding rapid commuter lines for the cosmopolitan citizen,” Paperson writes (120). I’m not sure if the critique here is of the lesson, or of public transit’s “metanarrative,” the way perhaps that transit systems tend to be designed on a hub-and-spoke principle that makes movement from one suburb to another difficult without going into the city centre as part of the journey—or if the complaint is that extending public transit to Oakland would enable gentrification that would price local people out of their own community (120). The latter, it seems, since Paperson devotes a paragraph to the effects of extending the transit system from San Francisco to Oakland. Is that an effect of transit, though, or of the outrageous real estate market in the Bay Area?
“Urban educators have few tools for engaging settler colonialism because terra sacer often under-girds environmental education in urban schools,” Paperson continues. “Environmental education offers three limited social justice frameworks: environmental racism—a framework that focuses on pain; green curriculum—a framework that focuses on rescue; and place-based curriculum—a framework that focuses on inclusion, and thus, the replacement of Native land/people with a multicultural immigrant nation” (120). Again, the suggestion that “pain” needs to be avoided baffles me. Students living in a city like Oakland might have direct experience of environmental racism, so why not acknowledge that experience by talking about it? What is the goal of environmental education, according to Paperson? Does “place-based curriculum” always occur at the expense of Indigenous perspectives? According to Paperson, “when strung together, such pedagogies concerning US ghettos contain a settler colonial teleology” (120).
Here Paperson turns to “[p]ain curriculum,” which “highlights, legitimately, the disproportionate toxification of air, soil, and water in poor, urban, communities of color” (120). And not just those communities, either: climate change doesn’t discriminate. In any case, Paperson continues: “reducing ghettos to pain-filled sites of environmental toxicity in need of salvation, echo[es] the settler colonial logics of terra sacer—wasteland whose inhabitants lack the liberal capitalist insights and technological know-how to properly occupy a city” (120). Where does that conclusion come from? Doesn’t thinking about environmental racism condemn those “liberal capitalist insights” for using their “technological know-how” to dump waste on communities whose protests can be ignored because they lack the power to resist the forces of capital and of governments captured by capital?
“Rescue curriculum,” on the other hand, focuses on green technologies and “the technologies of government” as solutions, but the subtext of this curriculum is, for Paperson, hidden: “The hidden curriculum of rescue naturalizes city planning, urban redevelopment, and de-ghetto-ification as inevitable remedies for pain. It positions ghettoized communities as wards under settler colonial sovereignty” (120). In addition, rescue curriculum “promotes green cities, a wealth of green consumption through which the multicultural cosmopolitan citizen earns his/her/our right to be the nouveau settler. Enter place-based curriculum” (120). I’m not sure what Paperson would propose instead of this “rescue curriculum”: green technologies are unlikely to save us from ourselves, but does that mean we should ignore their existence? Do green technologies really displace ghettoized communities or remove their agency? I am not following this argument.
Finally, Paperson takes on place-based curriculum. It “helps write the master narrative of future, green, metropolitan neo-colonies. Often inclusive, multicultural, and celebratory, such curriculum highlights the urban as a place of diversity, flavored by communities of color” (120). This fantasy “violently erases Indigenous understandings of that land and place,” Paperson argues. “If Native people are mentioned at all, they are almost always only as a premodern population who were pleasantly ‘one with nature,’ or ecological Indians so few in number that the ecological settler becomes a ‘good neighbour’ or benevolent reinhabitant” (121). This fantasy “inscribes settler colonialism as a done deal, renders urban native youth as inauthentic Indians, and denies contemporary Native relationships to land and place” (121). This curriculum contains a hidden teleology: “native people used to live here. White people settled here; they fled. People of color replaced white people; they suffer. Coming up, the multicultural cosmopolitan citizen will replace people of color. When the Great American City is finally built, all the white people will be colorful, and all the colored people will be gone” (121). I wonder where Paperson sees their own experience in this narrative. Where do they live? What is their relationship to ghettoized people of color or to Indigenous people? As in “Decolonization Is Not a Metaphor,” I get the sense here that the best thing for everyone would be white people leaving—that’s the point, I think, of Tuck and Yang’s fantasy about Natty Bumppo leaving or vanishing from the land he unjustly occupies:
In the unwritten decolonial version of Cooper’s story, Hawkeye would lose his land back to the Mohawk—the real people upon whose land Cooperstown was built and whose rivers, lakes, and forests Cooper mined for his frontier romances. Hawkeye would shoot his last arrow, or his last long-rifle shot, return his eagle feather, and would be renamed Natty Bumppo, settler on Native land. The story would end with the moment of this recognition. Unresolved are the questions: Would a conversation follow after that between Native and the last settler? Would the settler leave or just vanish? Would he ask to stay, and if he did, who would say yes? These are questions that will be addressed at decolonization, and not a priori in order to appease anxieties for a settler future. (Tuck and Yang 17)
Paperson, of course, is Yang—his faculty web site says that “[s]ometimes he writes as la paperson, an avatar that irregularly calls” (“Wayne Yang”)—and I see a crossover in the ideas expressed in the two essays. What I’m not seeing, yet, in either essay is a sense of where Yang positions himself and his experience, or any sense that settlers have any kind of future other than erasure. For Tuck and Yang, and for Paperson, there seems to be no way that settlers and Indigenous peoples can co-exist.
Paperson is “deeply ambiguous about critical environmentalisms, such as movements in eco-feminism, deep ecology, and antiracist environmental justice. These are important trajectories in critical scholarship and activism around environmental justice, and ought to inform any decolonizing framework,” but they are “not automatically the opposite of settler colonialism” (121). Settler colonialism, in its guise of settler environmentalism, “describes efforts to redeem the settler as ecological, often focusing on settler identity and belonging through tropes of Indigenous appropriations—returning to the wildman or demigoddess, claiming of one’s natural or ‘native’ self and thus the land, again” (121). Living off the grid, for instance, “is a terra nullius imaginary of a somewhere, nowhere, neverplace where one is no longer a settler” (121). Really? We have solar panels on the roof of our house, but I don’t deny being a settler: I think that Paperson is being unfair and obtuse here. It’s possible to try to live in a way that doesn’t tie one to electricity generated by burning coal without fantasizing that one isn’t a settler. I know that from personal experience.
For Paperson, “greening the ghetto can mask a neoliberal curriculum of whitening the ghetto with ‘better-educated,’ ecologically ‘responsible,’ global citizens,” but more radical forms of environmentalism “can also uphold the settler fantasy of sacred ‘wilderness’—another form of unpeopled land—that must be restored or preserved” (121). It can, sure, but is that fantasy inevitable? We know that Indigenous peoples managed the land for millennia, and that Indigenous science provides insights into ways that we can stop ourselves from destroying the environment we depend on for our survival (see Buckiewicz). How current are those fantasies of a sacred wilderness, empty of human presence, when we know that wilderness is replete with signs of Indigenous presences? Could one accuse Paperson of being somewhat reductive here?
Paperson quotes Indigenous writer Sandy Grande’s argument that “both Marxists and capitalists view land and natural resources as commodities to be exploited” (qtd. 121), and suggests that “[s]ocial justice endeavors all take place on Native land,” before turning to the Occupy movement. I’m not that interested in the Occupy movement, which seems to have run its course—besides, I read Craig Fortier’s Unsettling the Commons: Social Movements Within, Against, and Beyond Settler Colonialism,a book-length critique of that movement, when I was studying for my comprehensives—so I’m going to skip over the way that Occupy Oakland failed to address issues related to decolonization and instead turn to Paperson’s discussion of critical cartography as a method. “Critical cartography is the mapping of structural oppression, as well as the critique of mapping as an exercise of power,” they write. “Although it uses tools from traditional cartography, it also redirects our gaze back onto the master narrative of maps. Mapping creates taxonomies of land, water, and peoples. It generates false territories and also false temporalities, as land becomes property in a linear history of shifting ownerships. Mapping is knowledge generated in the service of empire” (123). So, maps are not in themselves critical, “even if they document social injustice” (123). Rather, the stories told about maps, the narratives that surround them, may be critical (123). For Paperson, “[c]ritical cartography is an essential method for understanding the coloniality of space” (124).
Yet, according to Paperson, “critical cartography is not by itself a decolonizing method, just as deconstructing coloniality is not the same as decolonization” (124). Paperson cites Linda Tuhiwai Smith to argue that a decolonizing methodology “repatriates Indigenous land and life as they have survived before, during, and beyond colonialism” (124). “Decolonization is not just symbolic,” Paperson contends: “its material core is repatriation of Native life and land, which may be incommensurable with settler re-inhabitation of Native land. It is not a stance that grants an easy solidarity with more inclusive social justice projects—even if they are antiracist, feminist, or environmentalist” (124). Indeed, the incommensurability of decolonization with “settler re-inhabitation of Native land” would suggest a very difficult solidarity with social justice projects that involve settlers, since decolonization would apparently require the erasure or departure of settlers from Turtle Island.
Paperson explains the difference between place and space, on the one hand, and land on the other:
Land is not generalizable the way space and place are generalizable. Land is both people and place, that is, Native people constitute and are constituted by Native land. You was where you lived. Indigenous place-based education is land education. Place-based education, from a settler perspective, is far more inclusive—place becomes something everyone can claim, can tell a story about. Place-based education leads to restorying and re-inhabitation, whereas land education leads towards repatriation. (124)
So, if I’m reading Paperson correctly, settlers cannot use the term “land”; it is a term that is to be used by Indigenous people only, because it addresses the relationship between Indigenous peoples and their land. “Storied land moves place back, between, and beyond to Native land, providing a transhistorical analysis that unroots settler maps and settler time,” Paperson continues, suggesting, again, that the notion of storying land is also unavailable to settlers—because that would be a form of re-inhabitation, a recolonization (124). If this is true, what does it mean for the course I just finished, or for my larger research project? Nothing good, I fear.
Paperson now turns to specific sites near Oakland: the Mission Dolores in San Francisco, the Chevron refinery, San Quentin penitentiary, Alcatraz, and other prisons around San Francisco Bay, in what I think might be an example of restorying (124-25). “Despite being narrated as ghosts, as people long-gone, Indians are enough of a corporeal problem for the settler agenda that California has never stopped trying to legislate them out of the land,” Paperson writes (125). Part of that process of legislation allowed for Indian children to be removed from their families and sold into slavery (126). As I read Paperson’s words, I’m listening to an Elder from Cowessess First Nation, Florence Sparvier, describing her experience at Marieval Indian Residential School, where to date 751 unmarked graves have been discovered, and I’m thinking about the ways that legislation removed First Nations children from their families and then did not punish churches or the government for their negligence in caring for those children—because, perhaps, their physical deaths were as much part of the goal of those schools as were the deaths of their languages and cultures. The history is sickening—and it’s not really history, since it reverberates in the present.
Paperson alludes to a project he helped to create in which young men from Oakland took classes from men serving life sentences at San Quentin. He refuses to give details about that project, except to say that it “provided outlawed wisdoms to be transmitted in the only form possible: storytelling” (126). Linked to that project was another in which activist Cesar Cruz brought gang-affiliated youth together, teaching them “to seek the sacred in between the cracks of desegregation” (126). Again, Paperson refuses to talk about those stories, except “to say that within them, the coloniality that dislocated black/brown/red/yellow/white peoples became their node of convergence as people relocated to Ohlone land” (126). I don’t understand what that means.
Finally, Paperson arrives at their conclusion: a discussion of the Shellmound Peace Walks organized by the group Indian People Organizing for Change. “Walks to the shellmound burial sites around the ancestral, unceded Ohlone lands: covering nearly 300 miles over 3 weeks at 18 miles a day, from Vallejo to San Jose to San Francisco,” they write (127). Indigenous people have always lived in the Bay Area: it “was a place of transboundary relationships among different Ohlone and Miwok people” (127). The Bay Area is not “an urban Commons to be re-inhabited, but Ohlone land, a social place, a place from which one misses home and a place to which one can enact some desires to leave home. As an intertribal place, Native-Native relations to Ohlone land and to each other can teach us valuable lessons in re-imagining ethical forms of solidarity beyond the ecological Commons,” they write (127).
Storied land is a partial answer to the question of how to uproot settler maps of territory (127). “A poetics of land learns from human resistance to mapping, from peoples’ and nature’s transgressions of maps, and from land itself as a bearer of memory,” Paperson writes. Land resists notions of fixed space, they continue, citing Mishuana Goeman (127). But those stories must be told by Indigenous peoples, not by settlers. “Why Huey Newton became free in prison, while Johnny Cash hated every inch of San Quentin, has to do with a fundamental colonial difference between people who see themselves as constituted by versus dwelling in accursed/sacred space,” Paperson writes, conferring Indigeneity upon Newton in a perhaps surprising move (127). So Newton was constituted by prison, while Cash saw it as accursed. I think I would have to read Agamben’s book, Homo Sacer, to begin to unpack this argument, because Paperson seems reluctant to explain the concept of terra sacer and its connection to homo sacer clearly, or else I’m just too thick to understand their explanation. But Paperson gives another example of being constituted by a sacred connection to the land in a story about Geronimo Pratt, a Black Panther leader who was held in solitary confinement for years (129). Pratt “spoke about his time in solitary confinement in sacred terms of connection with the earth and sky,” Paperson writes. “He described initially despising the ants who would come into his cell. Through humility, he learned to learn from the ants, who offered a connection to the earth through the cracks in the prison. According to Pratt, the ants loved him back, bringing him food and providing him company” (128). I wonder if that story could be expanded outside of a prison cell, perhaps to think about loving other abject creatures—quack grass or dandelions or leafy spurge—or if, again, that expansion would be a form of appropriation, this time an appropriation of Pratt’s experience. Paperson’s essay leaves me with so many unanswered questions like that one.
“A poetics of land is, because outlaw life and outlaw land inherently disrupt propertied life and land as property,” Paperson concludes. “As storied land contends with the current condition, settler colonialism, it elucidates pathways of de/colonization of land and people” (128). The essay ends with unanswered questions: “What are the colonial pathways that bring our people into this land? Where do our pathways diverge from Indigenous pathways? Where do they converge with settler colonial ones? In other words, what is our relationship to settler colonialism, to Indigenous survivance and tribal sovereignty?” (128). I sense Paperson implicating themselves here, in the pronoun “our,” as a settler, or at least as a non-Indigenous person, but I would like to see more of that self-implication. What is Paperson’s relationship to land as property? Do they own their own home? What is Paperson’s connection to either settler colonialism or Indigenous survivance? Where is Paperson in this argument, in other words? Perhaps the critiques made in this essay, and the activist pedagogical projects it describes, are intended to identify those connections, but while they suggest what’s wrong with settler environmentalism, they don’t offer any sense of how to create a form of environmentalism that doesn’t fall into those errors. So, as I’ve indicated in my comments as I read this essay—and this post is very much an immanent reading, a first encounter with the text, an admission of my failures to understand and my unanswered questions—I’m frustrated by this essay. Perhaps I should try again, but I’m not convinced that a second reading would increase my understandings or answer those questions. For the first time in ages, I find myself wishing for a seminar class in which a group of peers could try to unpack Paperson’s essay. That’s not on the agenda–the course for which I read this article is all over now, except for the final paper–and so I’m left somewhat confused about how it might relate to my research—or if it relates to my research at all, since as a settler, I’m part of the problem Paperson describes, rather than part of its solution.
I’ve put aside my exploration of walkability for the time being, because I’ve received readers’ reports on an article I’ve submitted for publication, and one of the readers suggests that I need to read Place in Research: Theory, Methodology, and Methods, a collaboration between Unangan education scholar Eve Tuck and settler environmental education professor Marcia McKenzie. That essay has been accepted, but I want to be scholarly, and if Place in Research could be useful, then I need to take a look at it, don’t I? I know I skimmed this book while I was working on my MFA—some pages are dogeared, and there’s a scrap of paper serving as a bookmark—but I have no recollection of its argument, perhaps because I wasn’t writing these detailed summaries back then, so I’m going to reread it in hopes that it’s useful for my research in general, and that essay in particular. Plus, I just found out that it’s the primary text in a three-week intensive course I’m taking—which starts next week—so in academic terms I’m way behind. There are two books to read for this course, and that’s a lot, given that it’ll be over before it begins. I’ll start the second one tomorrow; the first, Place as Research, I finished this afternoon.
The co-authors begin with Indigenous notions about place. In the “Preface,” they describe the intentions of the book as seeking “to draw attention to the multidimensional significance of place(s) in social science research,” not just as symbols of the past but also “as sites of presence, futurity, imagination, power, and knowing” (xiv). “This is an important time to write about place, not just because social science, in general practice, doesn’t give place its due, but because we write from and into the overlapping contexts of globalization and neoliberalism, settler colonialism, and environmental degradation,” they continue (xiv). Such practices and contexts are, they argue, citing Kim Tallbear, “coproduced, meaning science and society are actively entangled with each other,” and that they are “mutually constitutive,” reinforcing and/or disrupting each other (xiv). “Coproduction of practices of social science, globalization and neoliberalism, settler colonialism, and environmental degradation comprises both the barrier and the possibility to making the changes needed for the sustainability of (human) life on the planet,” they continue (xiv-xv). The land may decolonize itself, “even if humans are too deluded or delayed to make their own needed changes” (xv).
The co-authors met at a conference planning meeting in 2009, where they objected to the use of terms like “complex ecologies” as metaphors without any references to actual ecologies (xv). They organized a conference session on “demetaphorizing complex ecologies,” where “speakers from the distinct trajectories of environmental and Indigenous scholarship mobilized contradictory language and understandings in their panel presentations,” they recall. “The worldviews, epistemologies, and lexicons mobilized by environmental scholars and Indigenous scholars were not only contradictory, but perhaps even incommensurable” (xv). They suggest that two perspectives emerged from the panel, both of which seemed to wrestle with “the same notion of the inseparability of humans with nature” (xv-xvi). One, advanced by Indigenous scholars, held that “Indigenous peoples have always had relationships to land that are distinct and sovereign from relationships imposed by settlers” (xvi). That perspective “emphasized a recognition of the inseparability of humans and nature as concomitant with Indigenous cosmologies and epistemologies” (xvi). The other perspective, expressed by environmental scholars, was that “more ethical and respectful relationships of humans to place” was necessary to stop environmental degradation (xvi). That perspective, however, ignored “the claims of Indigenous peoples to have prior, intact relationships to their land,” and “instead seemed to desire to form new relationships to the very same territory, without recognition of those prior claims” (xvi). At another session at another conference a few years later, the panelists discussed those incommensurable perspectives more explicitly in papers which “pointed to the ways in which social sciences, when not cognizant of settler colonial structures, can replicate some of the epistemic violences of settler colonialism and exhibit some of the tendencies of that structure to accumulate at all costs” (xvi). The co-authors have become more aware of the ways that environmental research in the social sciences “continues to be mired in assumptions and practices that perpetuate forms of colonialism and racism, despite well-meaning intentions to the contrary” (xvi).
Environmental and Indigenous concerns are entwined, but “there has been little discussion across these domains in academia,” and where such discussions take place, they tend to be “situated within historical blank spots and systemic oppression,” so that “those working in these areas do not always effectively hear one another” (xvi-xvii). The hope of the two co-authors is that “the discussions of this book will help contribute to broader engagement of the possibilities for collaborations and valuable incommensurabilities across these domains and their importance for considering place in social science research” (xvii). They also hope the book leads to research that better addresses place, which is “one part of what is needed to redress the consequences of colonialism and enable the sustainability of (human) life on the planet” (xvii).
The book’s first chapter functions as an introduction. The co-authors suggest that social science research is always situated in places, and that therefore “research in the social sciences is always concerned with epistemologies, questions, and methods that impact place and land, and the human and natural communities that inhabit them,” even if that reality has tended to be ignored (1). While there is a renewed interest in the idea of place in the social sciences, something “evident both in the increased attention to decolonizing research and Indigenous methodologies” and “in relation to ‘spatial’ and ‘material’ turns in the social sciences more broadly” (1). “This book seeks to develop complex and historicized orientations to place in research through providing social science researchers with rationales, discourses, examples, and methods of critical place inquiry,” a term the co-authors define as “research that more fully considers the implications and significance of place in lived lives” (1). The book also advocates “for theoretically and ethically responsive research in the context of the globalization of the planet, its populations, and places” (1-2). The introduction will “elaborate theorizations and practices of critical place inquiry in the social sciences”: “research that takes up critical questions and develops corresponding methodological approaches that are informed by the embeddedness of social life and with places, and that seeks to be a form of action in responding to critical place issues such as those of globalization and neoliberalism, settler colonialism, and environmental degradation” (2). They will explain how place is used “conceptually and empirically” in social science research, methodologies and methods used to examine place, and the “ethical and political implications and possibilities” of critical place research as “public scholarship” (2). Why it must be public scholarship—which I take to mean scholarship that is widely disseminated, rather than circulating in academic journals—is not yet clear, but that notion might be useful in drawing an analogy between social science research and artistic practices. Drawing an analogy is probably the best one can do, because the social sciences works with different methodologies and under different conditions and restrictions than art does: the contexts of both activities is completely different, and that might be one reason I put this book down when I tried to read it three or four years ago.
The point, Tuck and McKenzie continue, is that thinking about place matters “because it enables greater attention to the ways in which land and environmental issues intersect with social issues and social life” (2). They list a series of “interwoven social and environmental forms of injustice” that “have been created by long histories of hierarchical divisions among peoples, to other species, to the land” which are examples of intersections between land and environmental issues, on the one hand, and social issues on the other (2-3).
Next, they define neoliberalism as the “currently dominant global and globalizing governance systems” which “promotes ‘free-market’ conditions that prioritize corporations and economic growth over considerations of social equity and environmental protection” (3). Neoliberalism emphasizes privatization, public-sector austerity, tax cuts, and reduced regulations (3). It is “a current formation of capitalism and Empire, which is the reliance of territory on the natural environment to fuel unsustainable and colonialist encounters” (3). “Empire” must be capitalized in allusion to some body of thought, but I don’t know what that body of thought might be. Maybe Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri? I think so but I’m not sure. I’m certain it’s not a typo, however.
The co-authors suggest that the relationship “between capitalism and the biophysical” tends to be left out of discussions of political systems in relation to land (3). The “biophysical world” seems to be a way of speaking about the natural world; the extraction of resources from that world fuels our economy (3-4). However, most discussions of neoliberalism leave out capitalism’s reliance on the biophysical and the resulting environmental damage (4). In addition, “the historical and ongoing land-based practices of colonialism and, in particular, settler colonialism” are also left out of the picture (4). That history involves an ongoing process of establishing and reifying “hierarchies of settler over Indigenous” (4). The co-authors state that they will draw on scholarship about settler colonialism “to problematize settler relations to land as they affect Indigenous peoples, land, and other life forms, including as linked to current environmental devastation and curtailed possibilities for future generations” (4). “Settler and colonial futurities based on expansionist, capitalist, and racist assumptions necessitate practices of decolonization in order to re-prioritize Indigenous and land-based futurities” (4). As always, a definition of the word “futurity” would be helpful here, although this sentence is a little clearer than Tuck’s famous article on decolonization and metaphor (co-authored with K. Wayne Yang).
This book addresses those absences in the social sciences, highlighting research that elaborates and addresses “the embeddedness of social life, including economic policy, with land and environment” (5). Here they cite scholars such as Doreen Massey (whose work I’ve written about here) and Jodi Byrd (whose work I should’ve written about here, but I’ve only skimmed it). They suggest that this research theorizes place, and they use it “to advocate for greater consideration of place in social science research” (5). The book’s approach “is uncommon because it seeks to bring decolonizing Indigenous studies, environmental scholarship, and related critical areas concerned with place into conversation with one another,” despite the distinct epistemologies, discourses, and practices of those bodies of knowledge (5). “There are often important divergences and even competing logics at work in these areas of research, some that may indeed be incommensurable,” they state. “This book brings these areas into conversation, without papering over differences, but also without maintaining false dichotomies” (5). Instead, they “bridge these and related domains to examine place in social science research, and in doing so, define and contribute to the emerging area of critical place inquiry” by offering “cross-disciplinary insight into how researchers around the globe are theoretically and empirically engaging, or re-engaging, place in social science research” (5). They map the emergence of critical place inquiry, mark the historical, economic, colonial, and ecological conditions necessitating that inquiry, offer new methodological directions, and highlight research that informs “how one can understand and inhabit place through research,” thereby thinking about “the why, what, and how of developing critical place research in the social sciences” (5).
Place is a complex concept, and it’s most often defined in relation to space (6). Space tends to be seen as a dimension within which things are located or contained (6). In the Newtonian philosophical tradition, “space is concrete, and indeed it is this concreteness that makes it real” (6). In contrast, in the Leibnizian conceptualization, “space is relational and dependent, holding no powers itself” (6). It is active yet depends on relations between objects occupying places (6). If that’s not clear to you, don’t worry; it’s not clear to me, either. I would’ve expected them to begin with Yi-Fu Tuan’s distinction between place and space, but although it’s in the book’s bibliography, it must appear at a later point. (It does, in passing.) The co-authors suggest that Donna Haraway updates the Leibnizian version of space, extending it as “dynamic, interactive, indeed, as a process” (6). That reminds me of Doreen Massey’s book on space, but strangely Tuck and McKenzie mention it in relation to place on the previous page.
Place, on the other hand, typically conveys geographic meaning (6-7). Place is usually specific (7). The term went through a revival in the 1970s and 1980s in which the connection between place and social relations, and place and meaning-making, was explored (7). At the same time, though “theorizations of identity and globalization have led to critiques of terminology and theorizations of place in social research” (7). “Considering the ways in which factors such as gender, racialization, nationality, or access to financial or technological resources affects people’s access to, mobility across, and experiences of place, some scholars have suggested that the defining of places is problematic,” Tuck and McKenzie note (7). Some arguments contend that the world is become placeless because of technology and rapid transportation (7). Writing about place thus becomes quaint or archaic (8). “Thus, theorists and researchers attendant to issues of space and place must work against the seemingly common-sense conclusions of popular analyses of globalization, which, not operating from a complex conceptualization of space and place, attempt to foretell the end of place,” Tuck and McKenzie write (8).
Place is often—usually, even—“superficially addressed in social science inquiry,” which pays little attention to where things happen (8)—except in geography, I would think, which is a social science. “Thus, in much social science research, place is just the surface upon which life happens (and from which data are collected),” they suggest (9). It’s a backdrop, rarely examined in detail (9). Place is “on the periphery” of such research, not part of the analysis or “considered in terms of the specifics of research methodology or methods” (9). Relying on notions of space and place that have changed little since the seventeenth century “has implications for the richness of theories of space and place engaged in social science research, but also for how the relationships between space and place are usually understood” (9).
Next, Tuck and McKenzie discuss the various “turns” in recent social science research, beginning with the increasing influence of Indigenous and decolonizing perspectives and methodologies (9).They cite Linda Tuhiwai Smith and Shawn Wilson, among others, as examples (9-10). “Looking to Indigenous languages helps to demonstrate the differences between understandings of space and place (and time) that exist between Western/colonial frameworks and Indigenous knowledge systems,” they state, citing Tuhiwai Smith’s suggestion that in Maori the word for time or space is the same, but in Western philosophies space is separated from time (10). For Tuhiwai Smith, this distinction is important, because colonialism involves “processes of marking, defining, and controlling space” through the figures of the line, the centre, and the outside (10-11). For Tuck and McKenzie, “one major outgrowth of the increased attention to Indigenous perspectives and methodologies in academic discourse is the recognition that alternative, long-held, comprehensive and theoretically sophisticated understandings of place exist outside, alongside, against, and within the domain of the Western philosophical tradition” (11). These understandings are often framed in terms of “land,” and they “derive from entirely different epistemological and cosmological foundations” which prevent them from being easily absorbed into Western ideas: “They come from, and go to, a different place” (11). That doesn’t mean Indigenous ideas about land are pristine, devoid of Western influence, or even that keeping Indigenous theories separate from colonial or settler influences is possible or desirable (11). “But the persistence/existence of Indigenous theorizations and methodologies of land serve as a rejoinder to Western theorizations of place, to mark how theories of the West have also been shaped by its colonial and settler histories and current pursuits,” Tuck and McKenzie state (11). All of this gets clearer later in the book.
In addition, decolonizing perspectives, which are informed by Indigenous theories, “seek to undo the real and symbolic violences of colonialism” (11). “Decolonization is determined to thwart colonial apparatuses, recover Indigenous land and life, and shape a new structure and future for all life,” Tuck and McKenzie write (11). Decolonization “requires unique theories and enactments across sites,” they continue, suggesting that it is always specific to time, place, and context (11). It is always about land (11).
Next Tuck and McKenzie discuss the spatial turn in social sciences. The spatial turn, according to Edward Soja, is likely to change profoundly “all aspects of inquiry, including ontological and epistemological considerations, theory formation, empirical research, and applied knowledge” (12). They cite Doreen Massey’s insistence that “how we imagine space has consequences: seeing space as commensurate with voyages and discovery, as something to be traversed, as the same as the land and ocean, as a surface, as a given, will have ramifications” (12-13). (I need to reread Massey’s book.) If, for instance, we think of space as a neutral place upon which human life takes place, “it becomes possible to view other variations of human life as simply phenomena atop this benign surface; this may not at first appear to be problematic, but it is insofar as phenomena on the surface may be seen to be waiting to be discovered, conquered, but also managed, exploited, rescued, pathologized” (13).
Globalization, according to Massey, turns space into time and geography into history: therefore, contemporary analyses of space need to refuse those shifts (13). Massey contends that space is constituted through interactions; space and multiplicity require each other; and space is always under construction (13). Tuck and McKenzie praise the “conceptual moves” Massey makes, including the notion of geographies of care (13). Space, according to Massey, presents us with the “challenge of our constitutive interrelatedness,” “the radical contemporaneity of an ongoing multiplicity of others, human and nonhuman,” and “the ongoing and ever-specific project of the practices through which that sociability is to be configured” (qtd. 13).
Nevertheless, the spatial turn offers “problematic characterizations of space” (13). In some cases, the contrast between space and place is not clearly articulated: “Places are not always named, and not always justly named. They do not always appear on maps; they do not have agreed-upon boundaries. They are not fixed. Places are not readily understood by objective accounts. Finally and most importantly, places have practices. In some definitions, places are practices” (14). This list of the characteristics of place seems to align it with Massey’s notion of space, and I’m not sure how to untangle them. I’d have to return to Massey’s book, which I don’t have time to do right now—maybe later this summer.
Next, Tuck and McKenzie discuss the new materialist or ontological turn in the social sciences (14). This is a body of work I know little about but, from what I’ve heard at conferences, sounds promising for my research. It also seems like an overwhelming group of texts, the subject of an entire dissertation, not just a small corner of a theoretical exegesis. The new materialist turn emphasizes bodies rather than language, and is thus a reaction against poststructuralism (14). Most of the authors considered under this rubric “gather place or land into broader categorizations of actors of objects that are viewed as also influencing and influenced by social life (e.g., technology, institutions, animals, other humans)” (14). It is interdisciplinary, partly because of the influence of feminism, and it seems to focus on spatialization—at least according to the quotation from Karen Barad that’s offered as a definition of the new materialism’s spatialization project (15). New materialism is dynamic and interested in material and immaterial things (15). It turns away from subjectivity, calling “for a reappraisal of material reality, material causality, and the significance of corporeality” (15). It is interested in cartography rather than classification (16). Tuck and McKenzie approve of Barad’s suggestion that “topological questions of boundary, connectivity, interiority, and exteriority” are more important than geometrical considerations of space (16), which are reductive and see space as a mere surface (17). “Yet, Barad dismisses the entirety of discussions of space and place as though all of them adhere to geometrical constructions,” they continue. “Thus, we take Barad’s critique of geometrical constructions of space seriously, but are not yet willing to cede the notions of place and land for topology” (17).
“The increasing influence of Indigenous and decolonizing scholarship, spatial theories, and new materialism on the theories, methodologies, and methods of social science cannot be disputed,” Tuck and McKenzie write (17). However, that influence has not led to “a more robust discussion of place” (17). “In many cases, flattened ontological or materialist frameworks de-emphasize the agency of people and politics in attempting to better attend to the interconnected ‘networks’ or ‘mangles’ of practice in researching social life,” and “the spatial turn has emphasized global flows of people, information, and people” while “turning away from a focus on place in theoretical or empirical study” (17). “In contrast, Indigenous intellectual contributions rarely fail to engage in issues of land and place—especially via conceptualizations of tribal identity, sovereignty, and treaty rights—yet when these discussions are taken up by non-Indigenous and settler scholars, the salience of land/place is frequently left out of the picture” (17).
Therefore, Tuck and McKenzie contend “that scholars influences by these turns often do not go far enough to attend to place. Although there are rich theorizations of place that throb at the center of each of these turns in social science, in their wider adoption and redaction, place gets reduced and reified” (17). Place ends up “shallow or emptied” (17). “The challenge is to get rich theorizations (and methodologies and methods) of place to travel within and alongside the adoption and adaptation of these turns, and other turns now forming and emerging,” they continue (17). They also warn against using metaphors of place, typically derived from Deleuze and Guattari, which “invoke place superficially, too easily” and do little “to attend more responsibly to issues of place” (18).
In their definition of critical place inquiry, Tuck and McKenzie state that they “draw on the developments of postmodern, spatial, new materialist, and other ‘turns’ of the social sciences for their insights on the movement and relationality of place” (18). They contend, however, that “Indigenous methods are central and not peripheral to practices of critical place inquiry” (19). They provide a list of bullet points that describe critical place inquiry: it understands places as “mobile, shifting over time and space and through interactions with flows of people, other species, social practices”—a definition that sounds like Massey’s notion of space; it entails “understanding places as both influencing social practices as well as being performed and (re)shaped through practices and movements of individuals and collectives”; it understands “place as interactive and dynamic due to these time-space characteristics”; it recognizes “that disparate realities determine not only how place is experienced but how it is understood and practiced in turn”; it addresses “spatialized and place-based processes of colonization and settler colonization, and works against their further erasure or neutralization through social science research”; it goes past the social to understand more deeply “the land itself and its nonhuman inhabitants and characteristics as they determine and manifest place”; and, finally, it sets out “to further generative and critical politics of places through such conceptualizations/practices and via a relational ethics of accountability to people and place” (19).
In the context of that definition, Tuck and McKenzie say that the goals of the book are to produce a cross-disciplinary and transdisciplinary discussion of theories, methodologies, and methods of place; to discuss the implications of theories of place for applied methodologies and methods; to take the conceptual and empirical contributions of Indigenous epistemologies seriously; and to argue for the importance of place over space (19-20). “Place is the setting for social rootedness and landscape continuity,” they write. “Location/space represents the transcending of the past by overcoming the rootedness of social relations and landscape in place through mobility and the increased similarity of everyday life from place to place” (20). However, it’s the specificity and rootedness of place that makes it important in social science and the human imagination (21). Place is always specific; it resists universalizations and generalizations. And, finally, “the environmental consequences of deluding ourselves into believing that place no longer matters are stark and creeping” (21).
The book’s second chapter is about conceptualizing place. It begins with Daniel Miller’s 2008 book The Comfort of Things, a study of 30 people living on the same street in south London. “We find Miller’s method, of studying a single street, to be quite compelling,” Tuck and McKenzie write. “We can see how this approach might inspire other works of social science across disciplines” (26). However, that “supposedly place-based method revealed little about the street itself” (26). They suggest that although social science research happens in a place, those places “rarely are heavily featured in the articles, reports, and books that emerge from those studies,” and they wonder why that’s the case (26). They suggest that social scientists consider place to be less important because of globalization (27). However, they contend that “globalization has made space and place more significant, not less” (28). They quote Neil Smith: “Geographical space is on the economic and political agenda as never before” (qtd. 28) and suggest that “(Western) theorists have struggled to make more evident the role of space in society, whereas capital seems to have achieved it in practice on a daily basis” (28). “Globalization, specifically its unevenness, makes considerations of place more important, not less,” they argue, even though “undertheorizations of place . . . dominate the popular and scholarly discourses on globalization” (28). “Such undertheorizations have stark consequences with regard to continued forms of colonial violence (e.g., the U.S.’s now frequent use of drone attacks orchestrated by soldiers holding video game controllers from another continent) and environmental violence (e.g., the destruction of earth and water through the extraction of bitumen from tar sands in Canada,” they state (28).
“Within the context of Smith’s discussions of the geographical imperatives of globalization, the remainder of this chapter examines considerations of reconceptualized and renewed understandings of place, as grounded and relational, and as providing roots for politics that are deeply specific to place and yet connected to other places,” Tuck and McKenzie continue. “These considerations are drawn from new and renewed trajectories of materialist and spatial scholarship; as well as from longer trajectories of decolonizing and Indigenous scholarship and practice” (29). They aren’t aiming for a coherent whole—“conceptualizations featured in this chapter overlap and juxtapose with each other,” they state (29)—but they are interested in how geographers and other social scientists think about space and place and in providing inspiration to readers (29). They mention, in particular, the work of Raewyn Connell, who distinguishes between “Northern theory” (coming out of the global, metropolitan north) and “Southern” theory, “developed in four locations where colonial relations have been challenged”: Africa, Iran, Latin America, and India (29). “Connell’s point regarding which theories are prioritized in social science, where they originate from, and what legacies are tied to those theories is a crucial one for critical place inquiry,” they contend. “The place-based theory, methodology, and methods of research one mobilizes require ongoing scrutiny for their inherent legacies and effects” (29). They are particularly interested in juxtaposing spatial theories, methodologies, and methods with Indigenous theories, methodologies, and methods in order “to formulate a description of the theoretical foundations of critical place inquiry that are accountable to Indigenous peoples and futurity” (29).
Globalization is making space and scale more important (29-30). Examples of this importance include mobility studies and research into “non-places” and diasporas (30). As a result, place has been understood “as a contrary alternative” (30). Sometimes engagements with place are seen as a way to remedy the spatial flows of globalization, and sometimes they are seen as “outdated or reactionary” (30). Doreen Massey is one of the few thinkers to have theorized place, Tuck and McKenzie suggest, and her work “is helpful in her critiques of the oversimplified division of space from place and in considering why and how ‘place’ is an important and useful framing for politics and thus for critical social science research” (30). They cite a 2009 interview with Massey where she “articulates an orientation to place that acknowledges the connections across local places and their influences on global circulations of knowledge and practice,” one that integrates space and place relationally (31). In her book on space, Massey argues that “places are themselves moving and changing over time, whether through connections with other places and the global or through physical processes, from shifting tectonic plates to climate change” (31). “Such a relational understanding of place to space, and of place to time, suggests the ways in which what we think of as particular ‘places’ can be understood as articulations of time-space, or the interweaving of history and geography,” they suggest (31). In this way, mobility is integral to place, since flows of technology or people or other species move through places, and the places themselves are also moving (31-32).
“Understanding place as lived space, meeting place, site of social reproduction, or personality suggests the variety of considerations of relationships between place and social practice, across disciplines and epistemological frames,” Tuck and McKenzie write, citing Soya, Massey, Katz, and Deloria and Wildcat (32). They suggest that “embodied and emplaced practices of movement, and stillness, are among the ways that place shapes us individually and collectively, and in turn, through which we shape and reshape place” (32). Nature and land are “ultra-connected to human life,” not external to it: “land with its physical features, climate, other species, and other aspects can act on and in conjunction with social histories and introduced influences to form current human practices of ritual and ceremony; architecture, planning, and design; educational traditions; and leisure pastimes” (32). Place influences social practice, and social practice influences place (32). The co-authors cite, among other writers, Michel de Certeau’s essay on urban walking as “relationally determined and guided by established rules” but also as a field for individual invention and improvisation (33). Stories, for de Certeau, are a way of making places as well (34). The work of Indigenous scholars also examines “the role of storytelling as a practice of shaping and being shaped by place among Indigenous peoples” and “the role that cosmology and cosmogony stories have placed in Indigenous conceptualizations of collective identity and place” (34). “Stories thus carry out a labor,” they write—they create, maintain, and change narratives about “the places in which we live and how they produce us and us them” (34). So they are using two of de Certeau’s essays—one on walking, and another on narrative. I’ve written about de Certeau’s work here, but I had forgotten his discussion of the differences between stories and maps; perhaps I need to refresh my memory.
Tuck and McKenzie cite the work of Tim Cresswell—the notion that place gives us a template for practice—and Tim Ingold—the idea that places occur, rather than exist—before turning to the new materialist notion that matter is productive (34-35). They note that “approaches that flatten human and non-human relations” and that “de-emphasize the politics of materiality” have been the subject of critique (35). For the co-authors, “performances and practices cannot exist outside of ‘extrinsic sources,’ such as cultural configurations of power and past colonial experiences” (35, citing Anderson and Harrison). For that reason, they turn to the relationship between power and place. Linda Tuhiwai Smith, for instance, “has critiqued colonial naming and mapping practices that have worked simultaneously to dispossess Indigenous peoples of land and establish settler colonial nation-states” (36). “Learning from this critique and from the notion of cartographies of struggle, we resist ontological analyses that, much like earlier phenomenological study, focus at the micro and yet universal level, while ignoring the situated realities of historical and spatial sedimentations of power,” they write (36). Instead, they “understand place as experienced differently based on culture, geography, gender, race, sexuality, age, or other identifications and experiences,” and those “disparate realities determine not only how place is experienced but also how it is understood and practiced in turn” (36). Such “place-specific differences do not amount only to ‘diversity,’ but rather in many cases exemplify and help establish forms of inequity, colonization, and other forms of oppression” (36).
Thus, the co-authors cite Katherine McKittrick’s contention that “geographies of domination” need to be understood as configuring hierarchies of “human and inhuman persons” and shows that those hierarchies “are critical categories of social and spatial struggle” (qtd. 37). “McKittrick does not allow for categories of body/identity/place to be regarded as separate,” they state. “Her work pushes us to see how practices of subjugation, including racism and sexism, are spatial acts and to consider effective ways of mapping them. Indeed, it may only be possible to see how racism and sexism are not bodily or identity based, but are spatial acts” (37). That is a radical statement. They suggest that the work of George Lipsitz (who argues that both Black disadvantages and unearned white privileges is necessary, and that white privilege is a form of spatialized and structural advantage) and Winona LaDuke’s discussion of environmental racism are examples of their argument (37-38). They also cite Vine Deloria, Jr. and Daniel Wildcat on Indigenous ideas about power and place, where power cuts “toward those who have long-standing relationships with place(s) rather than those who purport to conquer them,” and Doreen Massey’s term “power geometries,” which discusses the inequalities of globalization (38). Within given places, “there are also more localized asymmetries of power and privilege, for example, in who can walk or travel safely in particular places based on identifications of race, gender, or sexuality” (38). “Individual and collective histories and memories of place also contribute in powerful ways to what is possible or not,” they continue (38). Access to places is unequal, but “some memoried accounts of place are explicitly impressed to the continued advantage of specific groups at the expense of others,” as in the case of Manifest Destiny in the United States, which gives European settlers the right to live on Indigenous land (39).
But to understand the politics of place, “we first need to extend our understanding of place beyond social relations and implications to consider more deeply the land itself as well as nonhuman species that inhabit it,” Tuck and McKenzie write. “In other words, place has meanings and implications that extend beyond human considerations” (40). They reject the use of borders, border crossings, and transgressions as metaphors, because those things are literal and real (41). In discussions of borders, the land is ignored, “even when social identity comprises landed constructs, specifically the experiential knowledge of life shaped by borders” (41). They refer to Kevin Bruyneel’s 2007 book The Third Space of Sovereignty and its “boundary-focused approach” with approval (41). They also suggest that new materialism or object-oriented ontology work “breaks down the distinction between the social and material, turning and in some ways returning to understandings of materiality as encompassing of, rather than singling out, social relations” (42). In addition, they note the importance of sensory experience, which is central to critical place inquiry since “we understand experience of and in place as embodied and sensual: that it is not just who we ‘meet’ in place in terms of social and cultural influences, but also that who we are and how we are is influenced by land and the nonhuman” (42).
Relationships of and to place, the co-authors continue, indicate “a deepened understanding of materiality” as a meshwork (Ingold) or an entanglement (Barad) of life on the planet (42). They note that in Indigenous cosmologies, the word land refers not just to the material aspects of places, but also to immaterial qualities—its spiritual, emotional, and intellectual aspects (42). Thus place brings together not only human histories, spatial relations, and social practices, but also “related histories and practices of land and other species” (43).
Practicing place or land in a way that engages “forms of critical Indigenous and environmental politics will mean different things to different people and communities,” Tuck and McKenzie write (43). The particularity of place can be a platform for resistance (43). Occupy, the Arab Spring, and Idle No More are offered as examples (44). Those movements involved the use of literal and virtual spaces and places (45). “Place itself, and our connections across place, can enable conceptualizations and practices of a ‘politics of place beyond place,’” they state, citing Doreen Massey’s 2009 interview (46), something I ought to read. “Critical place inquiry seeks to make the influences of place on organizing and resistance more discernable and, thus, better able to be mobilized,” the continue (46).
But Tuck and McKenzie are not only interested in the politics of place; they are also interested in the ways that place is thought and enacted in research: “how we theorize place matters for how we do inquiry and research, but also what counts as evidence, as knowing, as legitimacy, as rigorous, as ethical, and as useful” (46). They hope that such research can be politically engaged, that it can help resist neoliberalism and settler colonialism (46). “Our hope is that the transformation of our very conceptual maps is informed by more deeply considered and more elaborately articulated theorizations of place and land,” they state as the chapter comes to a close (46-47). That is the reason the next chapter, on “decolonizing conceptualizations of place,” pays attention “to the latent assumptions of settler colonialism and encroachment of settler epistemologies on land and Indigenous life in social science research” (47). “Decolonizing conceptualizations of place, like the conceptualizations described in this chapter, yield implications for the ethics and protocols, topics, methodologies, and methods of research,” they conclude (47).
In that third chapter, they begin by outlining their purpose: “we zoom in our focus on decolonizing conceptualizations of place, which was discussed more generally alongside a variety of conceptualizations” in the previous chapter (48). “Our aim here is to attend to decolonial and Indigenous renderings of place, and the ways in which they depart from (and collide with) conceptualizations of place that derive from Western philosophical frames,” they state (48). Such renderings of place “are always spatially and temporally specific” (48). They are particularly interested in “decolonization away from settler colonialism, which projects those who already inhabited stolen land before settlers’ arrival as ‘spatially, socially, and temporally before . . . in the double sense of “before”—before it in a temporal sequence and before it as a fact to be faced,’” they write, quoting anthropologist Elizabeth A. Povinelli (qtd. 49). Indigenous people, according to Chickasaw scholar Jodi Byrd, “must be central to theorizations of the conditions of globalization and postcoloniality”: the notion that place doesn’t matter “can be avoided if Indigeneity becomes a lens through which to view globalization and postcoloniality” (49).
These “decolonizing conceptualizations of place (and decolonization more broadly) draw upon Indigenous intellectualism and world views,” the co-authors continue, “which is why we discuss them together in this chapter” (49). Indigenous perspectives need to be at the centre of decolonizing theories and practices, although decolonial perspectives on place could also be informed by “Southern theories” and “theorizations of anti-Blackness in settler colonial nation-states” (49). “Decolonizing conceptualizations of place confront, undermine, disavow, and unsettle understandings of place that emerge from what Mary Louise Pratt calls ‘Europe’s planetary consciousness,’” they state (qtd. 49). The “deep structure” of that consciousness, according to Quechua scholar Sandy Grande, involves five central beliefs: in progress as change and change as progress; in faith and reason as separate; in the impersonal, secular, material, mechanistic, and relativistic nature of the universe; in ontological individualism; and finally, “in human beings as separate from and superior to the rest of nature” (qtd. 50). “Grande posits that contemporary cultural and ecological crises can be credited to these deep structures,” Tuck and McKenzie state (50). Those deep structures “both afford and justify environmental degradation, cultural domination, and the practices of “overdeveloped, overconsumptive, and overempowered first-world nations and their environmentally destructive ontological, axiological, and epistemological systems” (Grande, qtd. 50). I always struggle with ideas that are rooted in faith or that deny the material and secular nature of the universe; my early religious training, and my reaction against that training, prevent me from being able to accept those ideas. I suppose that Sandy Grande would say that means I’m part of the problem, rather than part of the solution, but I can’t help that. There must be a way to learn from Indigenous perspectives without abandoning my hard-won refusal to believe in a Creator. If that’s not possible, then there’s nothing I can do about it, because my ideas about religious faith are not going to change.
Next, Tuck and McKenzie quote Vine Deloria, Jr., who argues, “Power and place produce personality. This equation simply means that the universe is alive, but it also contains within it the very important suggestion that the universe is personal and, therefore, must be approached in a personal manner” (qtd. 50). In other words, everything in the universe seeks and sustains “personal relationships,” which means that the key question to ask about proposed actions is whether the action is appropriate (50). “Appropriateness includes the moral dimension of respect for the part of nature that will be used or affected in our action,” Deloria, Jr. writes. “Thus, killing an animal or catching a fish involved paying respect to the species and the individual animal or fish that such action had disturbed. Harvesting plants also involved paying respect to the plants. These actions were necessary because of the recognition that the universe was built upon constructive and cooperative relationships that had to be maintained” (qtd. 50-51). Indigenous philosophies of place, then, “represent significant epistemological and ontological departures from those that have emerged in Western frames” (51). However, Indigenous relationships to land are not romantic; rather, they are familiar and only sacred because they are familiar (51). The universe is a web in which everything exists together (51). The co-authors cite Seneca scholar Mishuana Goeman, who contends that the idea of Indigenous relationships to land are not “given, unchanging, and naturalized,” but that they are contained in stories (51). That summary of the quotation Tuck and McKenzie include here is inadequate, but it reminds me that I have a copy of Goeman’s book and that it is likely to be more helpful to me than I had anticipated.
Decolonization, Tuck and McKenzie continue, needs to “draw on conceptualizations by Indigenous peoples,” and it needs to be understood literally, not metaphorically (52-53). Here they are referring to Tuck’s article, with K. Wayne Yang, “Decolonization Is Not a Metaphor.” They note that decolonization in settler colonial states “is complicated because there is no separation between empire, settlement, and colony/colonized,” and contend that when decolonization is used metaphorically, that complexity is lost (52-53).
Conceptualization, though, is not the right word: it suggests that thinking is only done with the mind, as something separate from the body (53). Indigenous philosophies “engage questions of self, us, the (living) world, interactions with it, interactions with ideas,” and so they involve the body as well as the mind (53). Thus, words like conceptualization or theorization are not right, because of the narrowness of such words in Western definitions (53-54). Tuck and McKenzie contend that “the epistemological and cosmological departures represented by Indigenous worldviews (especially when compared to Western perspectives) require an expansion to the connotative meanings of concept/ualization” (54). Words like “relationships” are helpful in describing what they’re trying to say, “but only if they are imbued with notions of intention, consideration, reflection, and iteration,” along with “resistance, land, knowing, and experience over generations” (54).
Nor are place and space the correct words; Indigenous writers use those words to refer to something different from what they mean in Western philosophical traditions (54). They quote Vine Deloria, Jr.: “Even though we can translate the realities of the Indian social world”—which includes “the world, and all its possible experiences”—“into concepts familiar to us from the Western scientific context, such as space, time, and energy, we must surrender most of the meaning in the world when we do so” (qtd. 54-55). Deloria, Jr. argues that the central concepts in the Indigenous worldview are place and power: living beings have their proper place in the world, and power suggests “spiritual power or life force” (qtd. 55). Thus Indigenous authors often use the word “land” instead of place, as a shorthand for land, water, air, and subterranean earth, but they use that word with the experiential sense Deloria, Jr. invokes (55). “Among Indigenous peoples, relationships to land and place are diverse, specific, and un-generalizable,” they state, since every Indigenous group had its own relationship to their land. For that reason, “land” is “imbued with these long relationships and . . . the practices and knowledges that have emerged from those relationships” (54).
The relationship between place and land is not unlike the relationship between individuality in Western thought and collectivity in Indigenous life and knowledge systems (55). According to Tuck and McKenzie, the ontology of place-based paradigms is something like “I am, therefore place is,” but in contrast, the ontology of land-based paradigms is more like “Land is, therefore we are” (55-56). In other words, the ontology of place privileges the individual human, whereas the ontology of land privileges land and the life of a collective (56). “This represents a profound distinction that cannot be overlooked,” they contend. “Understandings of collectivity and shared (though not necessarily synchronous) relations to land are core attributes of an ontology of land” (56). In addition, “the land-we ontology . . . is incommensurable with anthropocentric notions of place” (56). The land comes first. Ontologies that put humans first, that put humans at the centre of place, or as “small and simple cogs in a universal scheme,” are not compatible with Indigenous land-we ontologies (56). Indeed, many Indigenous cultures refer to land formations as ancestors (56-57). That notion is “simultaneously poetic and real; it is both a notion and an action” (57).
These ideas about land, Tuck and McKenzie continue, aren’t just about its materiality, but also its spiritual, emotional, and intellectual aspects (57). Land is a teacher, a conduit of memory (57). Relationships to land are “familial, intimate, intergenerational, and instructive” (57). The idea that the land is a parent is not a metaphor; nor is the idea that the land is the first teacher (57). Land includes the urban; it’s not just about “green spaces” (58). Ideas about land are not “static or performable” (58). In addition, “mindfulness of non-Indigenous desires to access assumed Indigenous knowledge also needs to extend to a mindfulness of non-Indigenous desires to adopt or use such knowledge” (58). “This is difficult terrain in working both with Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples: to acknowledge and include Indigenous knowledge and perspectives by in non-determined ways that do not stereotype Indigenous knowledge or identities,” Tuck and McKenzie write (58). I’m not sure what that means for part of my research, which attempts to develop a relationship with the land through walking.
Next, Tuck and McKenzie turn to theories of colonialism. They suggest that most theories of colonialism have not focused on settler colonialism, but that has changed in the past two decades (59). “Settler colonialism is a form of colonization in which outsiders come to land inhabited by Indigenous peoples and claim it as their own new home,” they write (59). Exploitation colonizers and settler colonizers want different things: “the exploitation colonizer says to the Indigenous person, ‘you, work for me,’ whereas the settler colonizer—because land is the primary pursuit—says to the Indigenous person, ‘you, go away’” (59, citing Lorenzo Veracini). Settler colonial states don’t recognize themselves as such, “requiring a continual disavowal of history, Indigenous peoples’ resistance to settlement, Indigenous peoples’ claims to stolen land, and how settler colonialism is indeed ongoing, not an event contained in the past” (60). Most settlers don’t think about the fact that they live on Indigenous land or consider themselves implicated in the continued settlement and occupation of Indigenous land (60). Settler colonial states are hierarchical, with settlers at the centre of all typologies, at the top of the hierarchy (60). Settler colonialism is “a form of biopower,” because in some contexts, it has relied on slavery (Indigenous or African diasporic subjugation) (61). Finally, settler colonialism tries (and fails) “to contain Indigenous agency and resistance. Indigenous peoples have refused settler encroachment, even while losing their lives and homelands” (61). “Thus, when we theorize settler colonialism, we must attend to it as both an ongoing and incomplete project, with internal contradictions, cracks, and fissures through which Indigenous land and knowledge have persisted and thrived despite settlement,” Tuck and McKenzie write (61).
The notion that Indigenous people traded land in treaty negotiations “because they lacked serious understanding of buying and owning land” is a false narrative, according to Tuck and McKenzie (62). “There is indeed a problem with Western conflations of place and property, but not because Indigenous peoples were/are too pre-modern to understand property,” they argue (63-64). In fact, history shows that Indigenous peoples “engaged in heated debates over notions of colonial property and extensively used legal arguments to oppose European dispossession from the very outset of colonial occupation” (64).
“Through the process and structuring of settler colonialism, land is remade into property, and human relationships to land are redefined/reduced to the relationship of owner to his property,” Tuck and McKenzie write. “When land is recast as property, place becomes exchangeable, saleable, and steal-able” (64). However, the most important aim of this recasting “is to make it ahistorical to hack away the narratives that invoke prior claims and thus reaffirm the myth of terra nullius. Existing epistemological, ontological, and cosmological relationships to land are interred, indeed made pre-modern and backward” (64). The notion of land as property is central to the ideologies of settler colonialism, which are “reliant upon constructions of land as extractable capital, the structural denial of indigenous sovereignty, the fantasy of discovery, and the naturalization of heteropatriarchal nation-state” (65). (Why the nation-state is heteropatriarchal is not clear: it is flexible enough to allow women and LGBTQ2+ people to occupy places of power.)
“Western notions of place have been compromised by an over-reliance on the European, colonial notion of property,” but Indigenous thinkers and Elders remind us that “there are more complex and meaningful relationships to land that humans have always enacted” (65). Those relationships continue, despite settler colonialism: “the interwoven aspects of land (origin) stories, claims, and identity” that comprise “Indigenous peoples’ relationships to place” have not disappeared (65). Those stories show how the people are possessed by the land and answerable to it (65). The “structure of settler colonialism” has “reduced human relationships to land to relationships to property, making property ownership the primary vehicle to civil rights in most settler colonial nation-states” (65).
Settler colonialism erases the presence of Indigenous people, turning them into savages and, eventually, ghosts (66). However, “by their survivance and persistence,” Indigenous peoples “disprove the completeness, cohesiveness, civility, and ultimately the presumed permanence of the settler nation-state” (66). In addition, settler colonialism “structures anti-blackness by circulating stories of (the descend[a]nts of) chattel slaves as monsters, as requiring containment” (67). For instance, in the United States, “the contemporary prison industrial complex” is “an extension of chattel slavery, in which Black and brown bodies are contained to build the wealth of mostly white towns relying financially on incarceration centers” (67). I would think the use of prison labour or the existence of private prisons are much stronger arguments on this point than keeping white towns alive by keeping prisons open or expanding them.
Settlers are defined by their actions—by their “attempts to live on stolen land and make it their home. A desire to emplace is a desire to resolve the experience of dis-location implicit in living on stolen land” (67). Settlers are not immigrants, because they do not attempt to fit into the already existing communities and cultures; instead, “they implement their own laws and understandings of the world onto stolen land” (67). “Settler emplacement is incommensurable with Indigenous life insofar as it requires erasure of Indigenous life and ontologies,” which leads settlers to “engage a range of settler moves to innocence to relieve themselves of the discomfort of dis-location, and to further emplacement/replacement” (67). Tuck and Yang’s essay is cited again here. No doubt Tuck would consider my walking project a settler move to innocence.
Tuck and McKenzie note that there are “variations to the settler colonial triad”—the three structures of Indigenous erasure, Black containment, and Settler ascendancy they have been discussing—including Jodi Byrd’s use of the word “arrivants” to describe people forced to come to the Americas through the violence of global colonialism and imperialism (67). “This nomenclature is a recognition of the ways in which arrivants both resist and participate as settlers in the historical project of settler colonialism,” since both settlers and arrivants take Indigenous land as their own (67).
Settler colonialism wants Indigenous land (67). It turns that land into property “by destroying Indigenous peoples, and turns humans into chattel/property by destroying their humanity” (68). Indigenous peoples must be erased or turned into ghosts. At the same time, “settler colonialism involves the subjugation and forced labour of chattel slaves whose bodies and lives become property” (68). This somewhat repetitive argument doesn’t apply to all settler colonial states, however, because not every settler colonial state based its economy on slavery the way that the United States did.
“One of the ways in which current theories of space and place that emerge from Western philosophical frames are incommensurable to Indigenous and decolonizing conceptualizations involves the degree to which Western theories enable or are agnostic towards settler emplacement,” Tuck and McKenzie write. The core strategy of settler emplacement, “the desire of settlers to resolve the experience of dis-location implicit in living on stolen land,” involves “the discursive and literal replacement of the Native by the settler” (69). I fear that the co-authors would consider my walking project an example of settler emplacement. Settler emplacement can never lead to decolonization (69). The idea of replacing Indigenous peoples as the rightful claimants of the land is invested in settler futurity (69).
Here, they define that term: “futurity is more than the future, it is how human narratives and perceptions of the past, future, and present inform current practices and framings ina. way that (over)determines what registers as the (possible) future. Settler futurity, then, refers to what Andrew Baldwin calls the ‘permanent virtuality’ of the settler on stolen land” (69-70). Both replacement and emplacement “are entirely concerned with settler futurity, which always indivisibly means the disruption of Indigenous life to aid settlement” (70). “Any form of place or space theory that seeks to recuperate and not interrupt settler colonialism, to reform the settlement and incorporate Indigenous peoples into the multicultural settler colonial nation state, is invested in settler futurity,” Tuck and McKenzie contend. “In contrast, Indigenous futurity forecloses settler colonialism and settler epistemologies. This does not mean that Indigenous futurity forecloses living on Indigenous land by non-Indigenous peoples. That is to say that Indigenous futurity does not require the erasure of now-settlers in the ways that settler futurity requires of Indigenous peoples” (70).
I wish that Tuck and McKenzie would have said more about the differences between Indigenous futurity and settler futurity. They refer to an essay by Tuck and Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández, which I’ve blogged about here. I found that essay very difficult to unpack. (As an aside, I hate the way APA citation format encourages offhand citations to texts without requiring writers to engage seriously with the texts cited or explain what aspects of those texts are actually important.) I find the discussion of the term “futurity,” and the reference to Baldwin’s essay, which I’ve also blogged about here, frustratingly vague. The “permanent virtuality” quotation, for instance, has nothing to do with settlers living on stolen land; rather, it refers to the way that the future “can be known and hence real, as [Ben] Anderson suggests, but because it can never be fully actualized as the future, the future remains a permanent virtuality” (173). The reference to Ben Anderson is to yet another essay on futurity that I’ve blogged about here, where he talks about futurity as anticipatory action (777). You see, I’ve worked at understanding this concept, and yet it still remains opaque to me. Maybe I’m just stupid.
Finally, Tuck and McKenzie note that “Indigenous peoples have predicted the collapse of settler societies since contact, all the while building and articulating viable alternative epistemologies and ontologies” (70). They see the interest in decolonization as a sign that settlers now recognize “impending environmental and economic collapse,” and quote Nishnaabeg writer Leanne Betasamosake Simpson on this point (70-71). Decolonization, however, “is not just something that humans (may) do; it is (primarily) something that the land does on its own behalf. Whether or not humans can survive this latter form of decolonization can’t be known” (71).
The book’s second part leaves theory behind and moves to methodologies and methods of critical place inquiry. I’m honestly not sure how useful this part of the book is likely to be for me, since I’m not a social scientist and don’t want to become one, but I will persevere. They define methodology as “the epistemological, ontological, and axiological assumptions guiding the research, or in other words, the ways in which the researcher’s explicit or implicit assumptions are at work in the selection of research focus, problem, and approach” (76). Methodology, in this definition, is the researcher’s paradigm or worldview (76). That’s not what I learned in the course I took on methodologies in the fine arts—in fact, it almost returns the book to a discussion of theoretical perspectives on critical place research, I think—but perhaps that doesn’t matter, or the course I took was based on an incorrect definition of methodology. They also describe the term as the assumptions about knowledge, reality, the role of research in society that are embedded in research, distinguishing it from methods, which are specific ways of collecting data and analyzing it (79). The methodology “drives and informs how those methods are used, and with and by whom,” they write (79). They distinguish between empirical research, which “involves the collection and analysis of quantitative or qualitative data,” and conceptual research, which prioritizes “the use and development of ideas in addition to and beyond what can be collected through empirical research” (79). “Thus, while all approaches can be considered to be conceptual and empirical on one level,” in this chapter the co-authors focus on “methodologies that involve some quantitative or qualitative data collection and analysis” (79).
Tuck and McKenzie begin with archival research and its connection to place. Representations of place in an archive might include photos of places, maps, and historical accounts of places (81). They note that there are very different ways of thinking about archival research as a method (80-81).
Next, they discuss narrative inquiry and place. “Narrative and storytelling methodologies hold that narratives are how humans come to know, understand, and make meaning in the social world, while also making ourselves known, understood, and meaningful in the world,” they write (82). Narrative inquiry about place would involve stories about places (83). However, the co-authors also mention an artistic walking project by Misha Myers that brought together storytelling and walking in a methodology Myers called “conversive wayfinding” (qtd. 83). I’ve read about that project, and I might have read the essay Tuck and McKenzie refer to here, but I haven’t blogged about it, so I don’t recall. I seem to have outsourced my memory to this blog.
After narrative inquiry and place research comes phenomenology and place research. Phenomenology, they state, “can be understood as attempting the objective study of topics that are usually regarded as subjective, such as perceptions and emotions” (84). Phenomenology tries to get at the lived experience of places and the attachment of people to places (84-85). They cite many examples of such research, particularly David Seamon’s work (85).
Following that discussion is ethnography and place. Tuck and McKenzie note that ethnography means the study of culture, and that it has been critiqued because of the lenses that researchers bring to ethnography and the appropriateness of conducting research across cultures (86). They note that ethnography has more recently been used by researchers to study their own culture (86). Ethnography has always been concerned with place, “with the physical settings of the ordinary and their relationships to other material aspects of people’s lives, such as household objects, animals, institutions and technologies” (86). There are many different kinds of ethnography, including autoethnography and sensory or visual ethnography (86-87). Its strength as a methodology is “its fine-grained descriptive focus,” in the way it shows how people relate to place by showing instead of telling, “bringing alive for the reader socially embedded qualities of particular places in relation to their historical, spatial, and political contexts” (87). Among the ethnographic works they discuss is Tim Ingold and Jo Lee Vergunst’s edited collection about walking and ethnography, which I’ve blogged about here. That collection of essays, they write, “suggests the ways that knowledge is forged, both by the researched and the researcher, through the performances and habits of walking, as well as its embodied memories” (87).
Next is a discussion of participatory action research (PAR) and place, and community-based research and place. There is some disagreement about whether participatory action research is a methodology (88). It is, Tuck and McKenzie write, “an ethical framework in which exploitation is consciously theorized and avoided, people and their ideas are valued, and collaboration and mutual benefit are highly prized. Participatory action researchers engage in this approach because of its ethical touchstones, but also because they see it as resulting in richly textured, accurate, and useful data” (88). The word “action” suggests the way that this kind of research sets out to change things, not just document them (88). These forms of research, “because they are participatory and involve the efforts of real people in real places, are methodologies that can yield real and useful knowledge about place and places,” although that is not always highlighted (89). However, even after reading this discussion, I’m not completely certain what PAR is or how it operates. I also find myself wondering if there’s any crossover between PAR and social or relational aesthetics. Probably not, given the differences between art practices and social-science research.
Following that section is a discussion on mixed, post, and strategic methodologies. These approaches to research are often considered postmodern or new materialist in their theoretical orientation. One example is a project about drought in Australia “undertaken by a team of Indigenous and non-Indigenous researchers” that has been described in multiple and contradictory ways, including as arts-based research (92).
“With this book’s emphasis on critical place inquiry, whether research captures reality in some ways and/or is a performance or product of the world is overshadowed by what it is that the research itself does,” Tuck and McKenzie tell us. “In this vein, there have been critiques of the emphasis on novelty and invention in the previously described approaches at the expense of a focus on the research’s impact on social and broader material conditions” (93). What do these methodologies do in the world? They suggest that “framings and methods of research are designed to maximize the potential to act as a form of intervention, or as public scholarship,” an orientation that “could perhaps be considered a strategic methodological approach, which involves selecting the methodology and methods of research best suited to the type of data and analysis most likely to critically inform the decision-making and conditions surrounding a particular issue” (93). This, they continue, “is one of the methodological approaches with which we align, and it informs our motivations for writing a book discussing the range of theories, methodologies, and methods of research that can be mobilized in critical research in and on place” (93).
After that, Tuck and McKenzie turn to Indigenous methodologies and land. They suggest that these methodologies involve “deep connections between Indigenous knowledge and land” (94). There are several epistemic touchstones in books about Indigenous methodologies, and they are all based on “rootedness on and in relationship to land” (94). “Indigenous methodologies both are enacted by and seek to study relationships, rather than object-based studies that typify Western sciences,” they write, particularly relationships to land and place (94). Indigenous knowledges exist “within a universe that is relational and responsive” (95). Thus, reciprocity is another touchstone of Indigenous methodologies—even its ethical starting place (95). Reciprocity is the antithesis of extraction (95). In Indigenous methodologies, reciprocity has cosmological connotation, concerned with maintaining balance not just between humans, but with energies that connect and thread through all entities in the universe,” a statement “that is grounded in Indigenous metaphysics,” which “is regarded within Indigenous worldviews as simultaneously sacred and mundane,” rather than mystical (95). The “long view” is the third epistemic touchstone of Indigenous methodologies (95). “By the long view, we mean the centuries-long, or millennia-long sense of time that allows a vision of land and place as animated, formed and unformed, mountains growing at the same speed of fingernails, and oceans and ice flows shaping the coasts,” they write. “It is the long view that shows what is so alarming about rapid human-induced climate change, and it is the long view that might guide decisions related to energy and fuel sources, human migration, the whole of social life, and the necrophilic logics of late capitalism and neoliberalism” (95). Decolonization is the last epistemic touchstone (95). Although there are differences between decolonization and Indigenous thinking, Indigenous methodologies are linked to decolonization because they represent “a viable alternative ontological frame that has persisted and resisted neoliberalism and market logics” (96).
The next chapter, on methods of critical place inquiry, begins with an account of a dérive in Saskatoon, of all places, undertaken by McKenzie and her colleagues. I have to read that article! But the article referred to in the text isn’t really a discussion of that walking event. The brief description in the book is all I’m going to get. Nevertheless, they suggest that “[t]his example of urban walking as teaching and research method suggests several of the key issues we will focus on in this chapter” (98). This chapter is about methods, the ways that data is collected and analyzed, and it will discuss how that happens in relation to place, including “embodied aspects of data and data collection and analysis processes” (98).
First, Tuck and McKenzie discuss types of data collected or created in research: both “concrete” and “abstract” aspects of place. “Concrete aspects of places are defined as including the physical characteristics and objects present in a place, as well as how humans interact with these places and objects through their senses,” they write. “The category of abstract aspects of a place is used to refer to inner processes that places evoke, including dreams, imagination, memory, and feelings as they relate to people’s understandings and connections to place” (99). Visual methods can include seeing places with participants (walking, for instance), “or are created with or by participants (photos or video),” which “enable more insight into the concrete aspects of place that may be affecting understanding and actions” (99). “Oral data collection methods, including interviews,” can “provide data on abstract orientations to place through information on participants’ thoughts, memories, and feelings as they relate to place” (99). Of course, photographs or videos have formal characteristics that may suggest abstract aspects of places as well, so these typologies are not as clear-cut as Tuck and McKenzie seem to suggest. Nevertheless, they consider this typology useful for “understanding the value of different types of methods for eliciting qualitative data on place and people’s relationships to place” (99). It also suggests “the value of going beyond oral or written methods to include visual and sensory modes of data collection,” they state, citing Sarah Pink’s work on sensory and visual ethnography, which I have yet to read (99).
However, they continue, “a typology of concrete and abstract aspects of place also assumes these considerations can be separated—that objects and physical characteristics are merely physical without human abstraction; and likewise that human thoughts and feelings do not have concrete or material qualities such as manifestations in the body” (100). They note that “a number of different approaches emphasize the liveliness or agency of the land and materiality, and/or the embodied and emplaced aspects of human thoughts, memories, or feelings” (100). When researchers move past seeing place as a static background, “and instead consider more fully how place and materiality more broadly are mutually constitutive with the social, it changes the research frame”: researchers “become interested not only in how humans perceive or understand places, but also how various aspects of places themselves are manifested as well as influenced through human practices” (100).
To conduct research with the kind of active and contextual orientation provided by theories that understand place “as mobile, as mutually constitutive with the social through practice, as manifesting and perpetuating power relations including those of colonization, as emphasizing land and the non-human in addition to social considerations of place, and as perpetuating and enabling of politics” suggests “the need to go beyond collecting data from and with human research participants on and in place” and to also examine “place itself in its social and material manifestations” (100-01). They state that in this chapter they will “discuss four interwoven areas for consideration in selecting or developing methods for critical place research,” including land and materiality, embodied and emplaced data, memory and historical data, location and mobility, and accountability to community” (101). Yes, I count five areas for consideration, too. I’m not sure why Tuck and McKenzie say there are four.
First up is land and materiality in data. The co-authors quote Daniel Wildcat’s contention that being in a forest or other natural space is a source of experiential knowledge (101) and Margaret Kovach’s suggestion that Indigenous research approaches are specific to place and local knowledge, that they come from long histories of interrelationships with particular territories (101). That situatedness separates Indigenous peoples from settler societies, according to Kovach. She draws on traditional nêhiyaw knowledge for an analogy between Indigenous research and the buffalo hunt: the researcher must be prepared, the research must be prepared, there are cultural and ethical protocols to be followed, the process is guided by respect, and the resulting knowledge must be shared in a process of reciprocity (101-02). For Kovach, the buffalo hunt “provides an epistemological teaching, a reference point for how to do things in a good way born of place and context specific to Plains tribes” (qtd. 102). For Tuck and McKenzie, this analogy “suggests the place-specific aspects of methods, including the importance of place-specific protocols, relationships, and accountabilities in designing and conducting empirical research by and with Indigenous peoples” (102).
Kovach also discusses the importance of “how specific knowledge of and with place is held in storied practice” (102). “The weaving of place and story yields knowledge not only about social life, but of the embedded understandings of other beings and the land,” Tuck and McKenzie write (102). Narrative is central to Indigenous research methods, but it’s not the only method available: “For Indigenous scholars undertaking research on and with place, data may be gathered through a wide range of methods, including protocols, narratives and storytelling, dreams, sharing circles, walking, mapping, or other methods” (102). Research methods are forms of ceremony, they suggest, citing Shawn Wilson’s book, “within an Indigenous paradigm of relationality, and as undertaken by Indigenous people” (102). They also cite Mishuana Goeman’s argument that mapping is an important Indigenous research practise (102), although I’m not sure that would be available to settlers. I’m not sure how many of these Indigenous research methods are available to settlers without being accused of, or actually engaging in, cultural appropriation.
Sociomaterial approaches to research may “share an understanding of the performativity of materiality, including of human beings and social relations” (103). I don’t know what “performativity of materiality” means, though they refer to Jane Bennett’s work, which I’ve been planning to read, on the relations and connections between things in the world (103). A variety of contemporary theoretical approaches to research, including actor-network theory and spatiality theories, share approaches to sociomaterial research approaches (103). Those approaches “take whole systems into account, regardless of the scope of the material or activity that has been chosen as the research focus”; they “trace interactions among human and non-human parts of the systems, emphasizing heterogeneity of system elements” and the need to focus on relationships between those elements; they “understand human knowledge to be embedded in material action and interaction,” without privileging “human intention or consciousness” but rather focusing on how subjects and objects of knowledge “emerge together through activity” (103). “These epistemological and ontological, and thus methodological, orientations in turn affect the research methods engaged,” Tuck and McKenzie suggest (103). For instance, sociomaterial interactions are mapped by researchers (103). The liveliness of objects is considered (103). The connections between objects and places are explored (104). Object agency or “thing power” is considered (104). Embodiment and sensation are important as well (104). In addition, research becomes more experimental and eventful, even playful (104).
“Other trajectories of research focus in particular on the relationships between human bodies and places in developing and approaching research methods,” Tuck and McKenzie continue (105). Embodiment, in this context, refers to the interrelationships between body, mind, and environment (105). According to the co-authors, “it is now commonly recognized that we need to investigate the emplacement of research participants, and it is equally important for researchers to acknowledge their own emplacement as part of research contexts” (105). Phenomenology “is one methodological frame that entails methods of seeking to elaborate and understand embodied relationships to place,” they note (105). However, because of concerns about representing experience in language, “increasingly researchers have turned to additional methods to examine, represent, or mobilize embodied understandings of and in place,” from “ethnographic observations of participant interactions with place,” to “historical photo analysis,” “mental mapping,” or “participatory video” (106). “Visual methods have especially become more common, particularly photography, video, mapping and drawing, but also visual arts more broadly as well as web-based representation,” they state, citing Sarah Pink’s work on visual ethnography to contend that “visual methods must be developed and determined as appropriate to diverse research sites” (106).
Mental mapping, also known as cognitive mapping, is one important method of researching embodied relationships to place (106). Such maps are persona, subjective, and intimate (106). They present examples of cognitive mapping (106-08), but despite those examples, I’m not sure what it involves or how it is different from other forms of mapping—especially when they suggest that cognitive mapping can be linked to GPS coordinates as a way of linking drawings or interview responses “to actual locations on a map, collating and displaying the data in meaningful ways” (107).
“However, engaging diverse methods focused on embodied and emplaced understandings and practices also extends beyond the visual, and oral representations of the visual,” Tuck and McKenzie state (100). Sensory ethnography, in Sarah Pink’s words, tries “to access areas of embodied, emplaced knowing and to use these as a basis from which to understand human perception, experience, action and meaning and to situate this culturally and biographically” (qtd. 108). They cite Tim Ingold’s suggestion that the senses are not separate but rather different facets of the same activity to suggest that “attending to these varied facets can provide richer data” (108). They note Ingold’s influence on Pink’s work (and I’m a big fan of Ingold’s work) (108). They suggest that “the ways in which the senses play a role in how cultures and places are constituted and changed” is important, and that the link between the senses and memory needs to be considered if we think of memories as “sedimented in the body” (108-09). “These considerations extend to how cultural, gendered, racialized, class-based, generational, and other experiences and identities influence the meanings and memories imbued into sensory encounters,” they state (109).
However along with “a reflexivity about how the sensory experiences of the researcher and participants are produced through and influence the research encounter, considering emplaced understandings in research entails selecting methods that are aligned with the research questions and setting of focus” (109). So, for instance, “[t]he location of observation, as well as other research methods such as interviews, can also influence the ability to attend to embodied and emplaced data—for example, in eating or walking with participants or interviewing or working together in different locations” (109). The point seems to be using “multi-sensory data” to demonstrate “various forms of emplaced knowledge” (110).
Next, Tuck and McKenzie discuss memory and historical data. “This section interfaces with earlier sections on land and material data, and embodied and emplaced data, and focuses in on the temporal dimensions of research methods concerned with place and social life,” they write. “Specifically, it highlights the use of historical data in studying past, present, and future conditions, including the ways in which research methods address memory as social science research on and in place” (110). They suggest, quoting oral historian Lynn Abrams, that memory is “a process of remembering: the calling up of images, stories, experiences and emotions from our past life, ordering them, placing them within a narrative or story and then telling them in a way that is shaped at least in part by our social and cultural context” (qtd. 110). Memory is not an abstract concept, but rather “a practical and active process of reconstruction whereby traces of the past are placed in conjunction with one another to tell a story” (Abrams, qtd. 110). Memory is about the individual, but it is also about the community, the collective, and the nation (110). In this way, individual memories “are situated within a field of memory work that operates at many levels in society” (110).
Place has “a significant influence in the shaping and recalling of memory,” they continue (111). “Places can function intentionally or implicitly as ‘sites of memory,’” such as public memorials, historic sites, or tourist destinations (111). Memories are “actively constructed and reconstructed in relationship to land and place,” Tuck and McKenzie continue (111). For this reason, researchers “need to ask why specific stories are told in particular ways and in particular locations, and how individual and collective memories are constituted and shifted through various manifestations of memories, whether in place sites, individual stories, or collective narratives” (111). Stories related to individual and collective memories are central to many research methods, and Tuck and McKenzie suggest that these include memory-work, oral/life history, qualitative longitudinal research, ethnography, intergenerational, and follow-up studies, along with “a broad range of narrative and storytelling approaches, including Indigenous methodologies” (111). “However, memory is a central aspect of social life and thus can also be considered implicit in all methodologies and methods,” they contend (111). In addition, social-science researchers “have taken up a focus on the role of the temporal in relation to place and social life, by engaging in multiple interviews and in different locations, in relation to historical documentary sources, in genealogies of specific practices, through participatory methods, and by many other means, in order to attempt to consider memory and the temporal in relation to place in research” (111). In addition, texts and maps can be used in historical research (112). Discussions of memory can also include an attention to nostalgia (113). Participatory action research can also be used to examine individual and collective memories (113). And, Tuck and McKenzie suggest, “sometimes the best way to consider the role of time in social and place-based practice is over time,” through longitudinal studies (114).
The chapter’s next section takes on location and mobility (114). Location, Tuck and McKenzie write, “matters in considering and operationalizing research methods” (114). In this section, they consider “how objects in different locations and the land itself can be considered actors in the research process,” and “how the location of the implementation of methods may matter for the data collected or created, including via mobile methods such as walking interviews or video go alongs, as well as how particular methods and technologies, such as social network analysis (SNA) and global positioning systems (GPS) are being use to map and analyze data in relation to location and mobility” (114).
“Certain methodologies of research, such as ethnographic and participatory or community-based approaches, originated with a focus on attention to the location of data collection,” Tuck and McKenzie continue (114). However, the way that place influences the production of knowledge, or that “place could be harnessed to elicit information on identities, emotions, and power relationships,” is often overlooked (114). Where an interview takes place, in other words, is important and influences the information shared by participants (115). Considerations about the locations of the research also extend to mobile methods (115). Social network analysis identifies relationships between members of social or activist networks “in order to compare, understand, and potentially enhance those relationships” (115).
The chapter’s last section discusses accountability with community in critical place research (116). Central to research on questions of Indigenous, social, or environmental justice “is how the research contributes to interventions in such conditions”; in other words, critical place research is supposed to be useful, rather than neutral (117). “The methodology and methods mobilized to such aims will depend on the social location and skills of the researcher, the audience and intended outcomes of the proposed research, what is feasible logistically and within given timeframes, and other considerations,” Tuck and McKenzie write. “However, deciding what approach to research is in the best interests of a given issue or context necessitates the input or participation of those potentially affected by the research or the issues it seeks to address” (117).
The co-authors recognize “the obstacles associated with conceptualizations and practices of community accountability” (117). The word “community” has been critiqued, and yet it is necessary, because groups of people do have common experiences and solidarities (117). They turn to Linda Tuhiwai Smith’s suggestion that “an Indigenous research agenda” has “Self-determination at its center,” and that self-determination is both a political and a social-justice goal (117). For Smith, rather than framing research ethics in a Western way, as individual informed consent, “there needs to be recognition and respect for community and Indigenous rights and views” (117-18). Aren’t both important, though? What is the relationship between individuals and communities? Do individuals never not fit into their community, for instance? Other researchers emphasize the researcher’s responsibility for following local protocols, “using methods epistemologically appropriate to the communities involved in the research,” and making sure that “the research gives back in concrete ways furthering the priorities of Indigenous peoples involved in the research” (118). How might art projects do that? It’s not clear to me, and a book on social-science theories, methodologies and methods isn’t going to answer that question.
“Related principles of ethics and accountability are also relevant to other communities, where past research experiences have served to marginalize or pathologize, and where research ethics are laced with assumptions about the naïvete and vulnerability of the researched,” Tuck and McKenzie continue (118). I’m not sure what the complaint about vulnerability might mean; surely some people or communities are vulnerable to marginalization or pathologization, for instance. The stories that are told or not told in research can do harm, rather than good, and researchers are responsible for those harms (118). For these reasons, “many researchers and communities have turned to participatory forms of research” that “entail research ‘with’ and ‘by’ the community” (118). I still don’t understand what participatory action research might look like, unfortunately, but I wonder what the role of the researcher’s expertise might be if communities are able to engage in research themselves. Why would a researcher with a PhD or years of experience be necessary at all in that case? A decolonial participatory research ethics will involve “considerations of reflexivity, expertise, humility, dignity, action, and relationality” (118). That kind of ethical approach “suggests highlighting researcher ‘blind-spots and biases’ in as much detail as ‘the seeming contradictions and inconsistencies of the people with whom we conduct research,’” they continue, citing Tuck and Monique Guishard (qtd. 118). This approach to research engages explicitly with settler colonialism in its consideration of research methods and ethics, and it “indicates how ‘participation’ needs to go beyond merely including more people in the data collection and/or analysis process” (118). The co-authors end this section of the chapter with a list of various research projects, including PAR projects, that conform to the ethical standards they have described (118-23).
The chapter’s last section discusses data analysis, which can take place during data collection or afterwards (123). “The specifics of what analysis can look like in relation to a particular data collection method ought to be determined in alignment with a study’s methodological underpinnings,” they note (123). However, what they’re interested in here are understandings of data analysis in relation to critical place research (123). “Specifically, we want to focus on the ways in which analysis functions to represent and produce research,” they write (123). The need to use language in data analysis means “that it is not possible to access experiences of place in unmediated ways” (123). Researchers therefore need to be reflexive, as do research participants, and diverse methods need to be used that enable everyone involved to see “from multiple angles in ways that might refract different understandings” (123-24). The divisions between art and social science need to be broken down—for social scientists more than for artists, I would think—in order to “shed light on these mediating influences” (124). Other social-science researchers suggest that traditional methodological models need to be avoided and that researchers should “focus on the material-discursive elements of events,” including considering the interaction between language and experience” (124). However, Tuck and McKenzie state that they worry that “a narrowed focus on the inventiveness of methods understood as performative misses the point of what types of interactivity are performed/represented and to what ends” (124). I wish I understood what they mean by “performative” and “performed” here—those words have many different connotations. In any case, they seem to agree with those who contend that research is messy and fragile, that it is entangled with the phenomena it studies, and that it is shaped by those phenomena in surprising ways (124). They quote John Law’s call for researchers “to think about method more inclusively by considering all modes of relating to the world as potentially suitable methods,” whether those methods are “verbal, pictorial, gestural, or affective” (qtd. 124-25). To that call, Tuck and McKenzie add that research “requires an ethical responsibility to consider the impact of the means and ends of the methods engaged” (125).
The next chapter examines Indigenous methods of critical place inquiry. “Our goal is not to set up a false binary between Indigenous and non-Indigenous methods of critical place inquiry,” Tuck and McKenzie write. “Yet, while not at all mutually exclusive, there are specific features of Indigenous methods of critical place inquiry that set them apart from methods that emerge from other intellectual traditions” (126). They note that the term “Indigenous” denotes both a racialized group and “a collectivized political identity,” and that questions of who may be called Indigenous are “powerfully complex” (126-27). However, they write, “We adhere to definitions of Indigeneity that recognize the power of long-held relationships to land, the role of other tribal members in conferring belonging, and tribe-specific understandings of kinship and responsibilities related to kinship” (127). Their focus in this chapter is on “methods that have been developed by Indigenous scholars or in collaboration with Indigenous people to reflect Indigenous ways of knowing and articulating knowledge” (127). “Indigenous methods are Indigenous because they take inspiration from practices in tribal communities, because they are designed to be meaningful for Indigenous participants, and because they work to gather information that is useful to tribal communities” (127). In addition, “there are theoretical commitments that differentiate Indigenous research methods from non-Indigenous methods of critical place inquiry” (127).
Non-Indigenous research paradigms and tools “exhibit underlying beliefs of dominant settler colonial society” (128), and for that reason, Linda Tuhiwai Smith describes Indigenous and decolonizing research methods as “researching back” (qtd. 129). Researching back, Tuck and McKenzie write, engages “everyday people in rejecting and reclaiming theories that have been used to disempower them” (129). “Indigenous methods of critical place inquiry are designed to engage the survivance of Indigenous peoples,” they continue, noting that the term “survivance” refers “to ontologies directly connected to the ways that Indigenous peoples have always been” (129). That term, which comes from the work of Anishinaabe scholar Gerald Vizenor, “is distinct from survival,” because it is about creating “spaces of synthesis and renewal” (qtd. 129). “Survivance,” Vizenor writes, “is an intergenerational connection to an individual and collective sense of presence and resistance in personal experience and the word, or language, and particularly through stories. Intergenerational communication looks different in other communities . . . but in Native communities on this continent the knowledge of survivance is shared through stories” (qtd. 129-30). There’s no way to know the outcome of survivance’s “spirited resistance”; it is “a force of nature, a new totem, and it has to be expressed and imagined to create a sense of presence” (130). “Because of the history of troubled and exploitative research conducted in Indigenous communities,” Tuck and McKenzie write, “concepts of researching back and survivance are bloodlines in Indigenous research methodologies” (129-30).
Anticolonial methods and methodologies “refute the centrality of the experience of colonialism as primary in the configuration of indigeneity” and “refuse to characterize Indigenous peoples as the only peoples contained by their colonial condition” (130). “Anticolonial methods call attention to the resistance that Indigenous peoples have always engaged in response to colonization and to the persistence of Indigenous life beyond the colonial reach,” the co-authors state. They suggest that this means that it’s inaccurate to describe “all Indigenous methods as decolonizing methods,” but that “Indigenous methods do work within an anticolonial frame that pushes back against discourses that depict Indigenous peoples as (only) colonial subjects” (130).
Tuck and McKenzie discuss six Indigenous methods of critical place inquiry in this chapter (130). They include “Indigenous storywork, mapping place-worlds and place-making, (re)mapping, eating the landscape, urban Indigenous land-based pedagogies and community-based design research, and shellmound work” (130). Indigenous storywork is the first method they explore. Storytelling and “storylistening,” which together seem to constitute Indigenous storywork, is a research method in which Indigenous research participants tell stories, and in which those stories are data (131). It comes out of the work of Jo-Ann Archibald, who “developed a storywork research protocol that began with meeting with elders to seek permission and guidance” (131). The Elders talked about what made for good storytellers and good storytelling, storytelling for children, and sacred storytelling (131). When those meetings were finished, Archibald wrote a draft of a chapter on storytelling “that detailed what she had heard in her meetings with elders” (131). “The verification process of this draft took more than one year, with lots of meetings and approval of quotations by all involved individuals,” Tuck and McKenzie tell us, noting that “[t]his painstaking process reflected what was needed in order to conduct ethical and responsible research in this particular community and place” (131). That kind of process would be impossible for graduate students to follow, though, given the tight deadlines and short duration of most graduate programs now, unless those students already had a connection to a particular community. This kind of storywork method connects to place through name-place stories. “In their endurance, stories reinforce connections with people and places and suggest appropriate actions and relations, including with land,” Tuck and McKenzie write (132). Along with storywork, “conversations, interviews, research/sharing circles, and other methods of narration enable the relation of stories in and of place” (132).
Mapping place-worlds and place-making is the next method. Tuck and McKenzie draw on the work of Abenaki writer Lisa Brooks, who writes about the connection between writing, drawing, and mapping, using an Abenaki word, awikhigawôgan, as a method (132). They also refer to settler anthropologist Keith Basso’s suggestion that place-making “is a profoundly human activity” based in “a sense of curiosity about which most humans are also curious: What happened here? Who was involved? What was it like?” (132-33). “The building of place-worlds is collective, creative, and generative,” they state (133). Brooks uses Basso’s notions of place-worlds and place-making to suggest that where things happen matters just as much as what happened (133). Building place-worlds, place-making, is “a revisionary act, a re-memory act, in which multiple pasts co-mingle and compete for resonance toward multiple futures” (133). However, Tuck and McKenzie point out that “place and land are not abstractions,” that Brooks spent a lot of time walking the land and paddling the waterways that feature in her books, sometimes alone and other times with friends (133-34). Brooks argues that readers need to participate in the awikhigawôgan process. I should probably read Brooks’s The Common Pot, given its emphasis on walking.
(Re)mapping “is a Native feminist discursive method that cannot be detached from material land,” and its goal is “to unsettle imperial and colonial geographies by refuting how those geographies organize land, bodies, and social and political landscapes” (134). It comes from the work of Seneca researcher Mishuana Goeman (134). (Re)mapping is a refusal of the way colonial geographies map the land (134-35). “Goeman’s project is to gather together exemplars of how Indigenous women have defined Indigeneity, their communities, and themselves through challenges to colonial spatial order, especially through literary mappings,” Tuck and McKenzie state. It’s not about recovering pre-contact ideas of Indigeneity, but rather about acknowledging “the power of Native epistemologies in defining our moves toward spatial decolonization” (qtd. 135). Goeman draws on Doreen Massey’s contention that space is the product of interrelations, a sphere of possibility, and “a simultaneity of stories so far,” which “move the discussion away from essentialism” to a focus on the idea that Indigenous space “always was and is in process” (135-36). Goeman’s (re)mapping refuses definitions of space “as limited to constructions of property” (136). (Re)mapping is a conceptual method, but Tuck and McKenzie suggest that it has implications for (re)mapping material, lived space: “Indeed its goal is to enact material change in Indigenous space and the space claimed by the settler colonial nation-state” (136). It does that by generating maps that present multiple perspectives that are up for negotiation (136-37). I have Goeman’s book but I have yet to read it; perhaps I need to do that work sooner rather than later.
While eating the landscape is defined by its originator, Enrique Salmón, as a practice rather than a methodology, Tuck and McKenzie suggest that “it could be an approach taken up by other scholars and community researchers as a research method” (137). Eating the landscape requires knowing about plants; Salmón was introduced to plants as relatives (137). Thus as an Indigenous method, eating the landscape involves understanding one’s kinship relation to plants and to the land. Food is Salmón’s point of entry into the land and to stories about the land, stories which make “surprising connections between (human) individuals, histories that make themselves known in contemporary time, mistakes made by outsiders just learning to tend to the landscape, and stories that affirm the roles of planting and picking in the cosmos” (137). Eating the landscape is also “an act of social reaffirmation” that re-energizes “kinship and social relationships shared across the (dinner) table” (138).
Next is a discussion of urban Indigenous land-based pedagogies and community-based design research. I don’t know what community-based design research might be, although I think I have a dim grasp on the idea of land-based pedagogies, but the beginning of this section, with Anishinaabe water walkers, surprises me. Participation in the water walks inspired a community research project in Chicago “that would bring together more than one hundred Indigenous community members to design and implement innovative science learning environments for Indigenous youth and community” (138-39). That project “intentionally put Indigenous epistemologies and ontologies at the center; at its heart was a (re)storying of Indigenous relationships to Chicago as always was and will be Indigenous Land” (139). Doing that meant making evident “the settler colonial (il)logic of Chicago as urban and thus ceded land. Part of the work was to refuse the assumption that urban land is inherently no longer Indigenous land” (139). The study—I thought it was a pedagogical project, but it also involved research?—“was organized as a community design based research project and took place over six years” (139). “Facilitators created an iterative process for community members to participate in a design process that would result in the creation of out-of-school place-based science learning environments for Chicago’s Indigenous youth and families,” Tuck and McKenzie write (139). The focus was on knowing Chicago as the lands of their ancestors and visiting old village sites, understanding it as a wetland where many medicinal and edible plants grew and still grow, and understanding the impacts of invasive species on these lands (139). The land became the teacher (139).
Interestingly, words consistent with settler epistemologies but not Indigenous epistemologies were discarded. The idea of invasive species, for instance, “was not compatible with other notions of plants as relatives that were so important to discussions with children and families” (140). So plants like buckthorn, which displace indigenous plant species, were still considered relatives, if not the relatives of the Indigenous people who were learning and teaching (140). Instead, those plants were described as “plants that people lost their relationships with” (qtd. 140). That’s interesting and provocative, but it might not help protect wetlands and grasslands from the effects of those plant species. I know a little about this, because the tiny pocket prairie I’ve planted in our yard is in danger of being overwhelmed by European and Eurasian species of grass—especially Kentucky bluegrass, which isn’t native to Turtle Island—and by perennials like creeping bellflower. I spent an hour yesterday trying to remove creeping bellflower, an introduced weed which is everywhere in this city, from that little patch of native grass and flowers. If I didn’t do that work, then soon there would only be creeping bellflower in the yard.
Finally, Tuck and McKenzie turn to shellmound work. Shellmounds aren’t just heaps of discarded shells: “they are in fact the burial grounds of their ancestors” (140-41). In Oakland, when shellmounds were discovered, bodies were recovered (141). One site contained thousands of ancestors (141). It was the proposed site of a new mall, and the developers refused to change their plans, hauling the bodies of ancestors of Ohlone people off to landfills (141). People “began organizing shellmound walks to educate themselves; other Ohlone, Bay Miwok, and Indigenous peoples; and allies about the shellmounds, their locations, and the ocntinued presence even beneath the asphalt, shopping centers, and condominiums,” the co-authors tell us (141-42). One such walk too three weeks and covered almost 300 miles; the walkers prayed and learned about shellmounds during the walk (142). “They were joined by people form all over the world who were moved to learned and commemorate the land and the ancestors,” Tuck and McKenzie state, noting that this walk has been repeated many times, “often making different tracings across the land to visit and acknowledge each site,” and that shorter walks are also organized as well (142). None of this sounds like research to me—it seems to be more like political activism—but Tuck and McKenzie contend that “shellmound work can and should be understood as research method,” within a form of research they call decolonial participatory action research, which is explicitly anticolonial and focused on dismantling settler colonialism (145). “DPAR is reflexive with regard to purposes, stance, theories of change, and potential risks of action and research,” they write. “It seeks to interrupt existing knowledge hierarchies, taking seriously the expertise that is derived of lived experience. It requires humility and vulnerability, contestation and creative production” (145). It also “makes space for collective work that is defined by self-determination,” in which people talk about what has been silenced and uncover that which has been concealed (145-46). I wonder what remappings of this city similar to the shellmound work they describe in Oakland and other cities on San Francisco Bay might tell us.
“What makes these methods Indigenous methods?” Tuck and McKenzie ask. “Are they Indigenous methods only because they have been made by Indigenous peoples for Indigenous communities?” (146). Yes, but that answer is incomplete (146). “These methods are distinct from other non-Indigenous methods of critical place inquiry because of the theoretical work beneath them” (146): in other words, the three theories that shape them—the role of refusals, the non-abstraction of land, and service to Indigenous sovereignty—set them apart from non-Indigenous research methods (146).
The idea of refusals comes from the work of Audra Simpson (146-47). Refusals are performed when interviewees mark the limits of what can be said or shared or made public or explicit (147). In Simpson’s work, she refers to those refusals, because they are important (147). “In short, researcher and researched refuse to fulfill the ethnographic want for a speaking subaltern,” Tuck and McKenzie state (147). Such refusals are more than just a “no”: they redirect attention “to ideas otherwise unacknowledged or unquestioned” (147). There are other forms of refusal. Goeman “refuses the recovery narratives that dot the landscape of Indigenous research” in favour of focusing on Indigenous futurity (147). Indigenous forms of place-based education don’t seek to re-inhabit the land—they refuse that goal—and instead set out to restory it, to see Indigenous peoples as its original inhabitants (148). “Refusal is a powerful characteristic of Indigenous methods of inquiry, pushing back against the presumed goals of knowledge production, the reach of academe, and the ethical practices that protect institutions instead of individuals and communities,” Tuck and McKenzie contend. “Again, refusal is more than just a no; it is a generative stance situated in a critical understanding of settler colonialism and its regimes of representation” (148). In the context of art practices, David Garneau’s call for “irreconcilable spaces of Aboriginality” (Garneau 33) or Dylan Robinson’s suggestion that structures of presentation and engagement that would exist for Indigenous artists and audiences alone are necessary (Carter, Recollet, and Robinson 211-12) would also fall under the category of refusal.
The non-abstraction of land refers to “generating real and lived impacts for specific groups of Indigenous peoples on specific expanses of land” (148). “Land is not a conceptual floatation device—although it could be because it figures so prominently in Indigenous literatures,” Tuck and McKenzie state. “Instead, each of the methods sets purposes about repatriation, rearticulation, and reclamation of Indigenous land. This land is locatable, walkable, material” (148).
In addition, “Indigenous methods of critical place inquiry seek to recognize, maintain, and expand Indigenous sovereignty,” either “through practices of self-determination and decision making, establishing bases for land claims, reorganizing prior chronological tellings of land into more useful organizations that show deep and sustaining connections, or through the reimagining of land through the foods it provides” (148). In other words, “Indigenous methods of critical place inquiry take seriously the sovereignty of Indigenous tribes and communities and seek to be useful in word and action” (148-49).
“Taken together, the three theoretical commitments of Indigenous methods of critical place inquiry help to explain how and why incommensurabilities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous approaches may persist,” Tuck and McKenzie write (149). That’s because those non-Indigenous approaches “are bound to be invested in settler futurities, which by design cannot make space for Indigenous futurities,” which is not true of Indigenous futurities, “which do not require the erasure of those who now participate in settler-colonial societal structures as settlers” (149). I wonder about that latter point, since Tuck and Yang call for the return of “all of the land, and not just symbolically” (7), which would seem to leave no space for those who are now settlers. Perhaps the idea is that settlers would be absorbed into Indigenous polities? It’s not clear. In any case, what does seem clear is that settlers or non-Indigenous people are extremely unlikely to be able to use or participate in Indigenous research methods of any kind. “The task of critical place inquiry is to organize itself around commitments to Indigenous sovereignty, refusal, and the non-abstraction of land—not as peripheral points or extra considerations, but as foundational to its praxis,” the co-authors tell us (149), and I’m pretty certain that those three commitments are not available to settlers in any way.
In their final chapter, Tuck and McKenzie consider how those commitments might take shape (149). The chapter’s title, “Ethical Imperatives of Critical Place Inquiry,” suggests that those commitments are the ethical ground of critical place inquiry. “The foundational axiom of this book is that place is significant in social science research but is rarely treated as such” (150). They have described and explored a variety of ways that research in the social sciences can address place (150-51). “Yet, questions still linger about why the call for more attention place and space has, for the most part, gone unheeded in social science? Or, put another way, why is it so easy for most social scientists to ignore place in their inquiries?” they ask (151). One answer to those questions is in Descartes separation of the mind from the body (151-52). “The implications of this cleaving are countless: it separated human consciousness from the material world; it initiated a preponderance of binaries; it amplified man’s dominion over the earth and its animals; it made the Western tradition simultaneously anthropocentric and removed humans from their understandings of ecosystems,” they state (152). Too many areas of critical research maintain that division between mind and body (152). However, “Indigenous studies has always existed outside, perhaps in spite of, the fallout of these separations of mind from body, individual from community and place” (152). I’m not sure Descartes is responsible for that latter separation, which is asserted rather than argued here.
Capitalism separates humanity from nature, and Western ideas that are embedded in “the logics of Enlightenment rationalities of prioritizing mind over body, individual over community, humans over nature” help to explain “why place has not been more significantly taken up in social science research to date (152). In addition, postmodernism’s emphasis on the discursive aspects of social life have led to a turning away from “the ontological or material, emphasizing the social constructions and effects of places, if considering place and land at all” (152-53). Also, settler colonial societies are unable “to recognize land and water in any way” (153). Settler colonialism works through denial, including the denial of place and land (154).
“Legitimacy is an integral concept/worry in all research, whether acknowledged or not,” Tuck and McKenzie write. “The words more often used to convey legitimacy in social science research—reliability, validity, consistency, test-retest, inter-method—have to do with inquiry being considered trustworthy” (155). Research also has to be generalizable; in other words, what is true in one place must also be true somewhere else (155). These ideas, particularly the idea of generalizability, “may work against meaningful engagement in place in social science inquiry” (155). They describe the idea of catalytic validity—“the degree to which the research process re-orients, focuses, and energizes participants toward knowing reality in order to transform it” (Lather, qtd. 155)—as a way of thinking about the meaningfulness of research (155). “Catalytic validity can be intersected by Michelle Fine’s concepts of theoretical generalizability and provocative generalizability,” they continue (155). “Theoretical generalizability contends with the ways in which theory meaningfully travels from rich context to rich context, even against all odds of easy transfer,” they state, while provocative generalizability is about the ability of research to get people to do something about oppression (156). Tuck and McKenzie also refer to the idea that research must conform to established standards so that findings can be replicated (156). They contrast this idea to another definition of legitimacy, the idea that research comes out of a filial relationship, out of respect and love (156). In this formulation, “legitimacy is conferred through the embracing of trajectories of knowing, of multiplicity, of specificity, of the intersectional, of movement” (156-57). “What is made possible in critical place inquiry when it is this second definition of legitimacy that provides guidance?” they ask (157).
Drawing on these ideas, Tuck and McKenzie suggest the the criterion for legitimacy is “relational validity,” which is based on “paradigmatic understandings of the relationality of life,” which is foundational in Indigenous epistemologies; which understands “that the prioritization of ‘economic validity’ is harmful for people and places”; and which “implies that research is not only about understanding or chronicling the relationality of life and the inadequacy of economic validity, but also that research necessarily influences these conditions in small or significant ways,” so that it “impels action and increased accountability to people and place” (157-60). “Research ethics that promote and safeguard relational validity shift focus away from the linear procedural considerations of risk, benefit, and signatures of informed consent that now characterize the discourse on ethics of social science toward ecological considerations of mutual benefit, honoring, recognition, and the long view,” they state (160). This perspective is very different from ideas of research ethics that are about protecting institutions from accusations of mistreatment (160).
“Centering relational validity in ethical practice is not an easy thing to do,” they continue. “The culture of academe is not ideal for the cultivation of an ethical practice based on relational validity; existing research protocol review processes, professional benchmarks like tenure and promotion, and funding timelines may indeed work against the cultivation of relational ethics” (160). In addition, different places may need different kinds of research protocols (161). Also, the notion of an ethic of incommensurability, as Tuck and Wang suggest, may mean that portions of different projects cannot be aligned or allied, only engaged in contingent collaborations (162). The idea of mutual implication, of paying attention to the hyphen between self-Other, suggests ways that research practices “can be transformed to resist acts of othering” (162-63). Understood in a broad way, relational or dialogical ethics applies to land as well (163). It thus takes accountability to land and interspecies justice into consideration (164). Relational validity also is accountable to the future, particularly future generations (164). That form of accountability is central to critical place research (165-66).
There is a lot in this book that is useful, including its bibliography, and even though I’m left with questions after completing it, those questions are helpful and valuable. Of course, I’m not a social scientist, so a lot of the arguments here don’t apply clearly to my practice of walking and writing. I don’t have to worry about the legitimacy of my research the way that social scientists do, for instance, even though the concept of relational validity ought to be central to my practice. The sections on theory and methodology are more relevant to my work than the chapters on method, especially Indigenous methods, which I doubt would ever be available to me. There’s a lot here, though, and I’m interested to learn how we’ll be called on to use this book in the course that’s about to begin. I may find myself returning to it, if only as a source for theoretical and methodological work relevant to walking and to place. There is a lot to take in here, and despite this note-taking, I think I might have missed many of the book’s nuances.
Works Cited
Anderson, Ben. “Preemption, Precaution, Preparedness: Anticipatory Action and Future Geographies.” Progress in Human Geography, vol. 34, no. 6, 2010, pp. 777-98.
Baldwin, Andrew. “Whiteness and Futurity: Towards a Research Agenda.” Progress in Human Geography, vol. 36, no. 6, 2012, pp. 172-87.
Carter, Jill, Karyn Recollet, and Dylan Robinson. “Interventions Into the Maw of Old World Hunger: Frog Monsters, Kinstellatory Maps, and Radical Relationalities in a Project of Reworlding.” Canadian Performance Histories and Historiographies, edited by Heather Davis-Fisch, New Essays in Canadian Theatre Volume 7, Playwrights Canada Press, 2017, pp. 205-31.
Ingold, Tim, and Jo Lee Vergunst, eds. Ways of Walking: Ethnography and Practice on Foot. 2008. Routledge, 2016.
Tuck, Eve, and Rubén A. Gaztambide-Fernández. “Curriculum, Replacement, and Settler Futurity.” Journal of Curriculum Theorizing, vol. 29, no. 1, 2013, pp. 72-89.
Tuck, Eve, and Marcia McKenzie. Place in Research: Theory, Methodology, and Methods, Routledge, 2015.
I was drawn to Sandy Grande’s essay “Refusing the Settler Society of the Spectacle” for the same reasons I was interested in Natalie Baloy’s “Spectacles and Spectres: Settler Colonial Spaces in Vancouver”: both promise an application of Guy Debord’s book The Society of the Spectacle to issues around settler colonialism, and Debord’s book is a touchstone of psychogeography and especially Phil Smith’s mythogeography. Grande is thinking about Debord’s idea of spectacle, but she also sees Michel Foucault’s understanding of surveillance in terms of spectacle as well, drawing (I think) on Jonathan Crary’s essay “Spectacle, Attention, Counter-Memory” (which she cites), and she sets out to use both of these to examine the relationship between spectacle and settler colonialism. “I am particularly interested in the role that spectacle plays in the solidification of the settler state and the consolidation of whiteness, particularly as intensified under neoliberalism,” she writes (1014). She is also interested in “the implications for the nonindigenous settler subject” of settler colonialism; she quotes Albert Memmi’s discussion of “the benevolent colonizer”—that is, “the self-effacing colonizer who refuses the ideology of colonialism but still lives within its confines,” a group that Grande suggests would today be considered white allies (1014)—who, according to Memmi, “can never attain the good, for his only choice is not between good and evil, but between evil and uneasiness” (Memmi 43). Grande contends that “the spectacular portrayal of Indigenous peoples generally and of the #NoDAPL prayer camps more specifically, serves as a site in which to explore the contours of this ‘uneasiness’” (1014).
Grande describes The Society of the Spectacle as a “cautionary text” in which Debord “laments the displacement of ‘authentic’ social relations with their false representations under advanced capitalism” (1015). Debord’s argument—which I have not read, and need to read—“remains remarkably prescient,” Grande states, because “[u]nder neoliberalism, the speed, scope, and power of spectacle has only intensified, reconfiguring the very character of life as not only conditioned by consumerism and commercialization but largely replaced by, exchanged for, and even rejected in favor of its more spectacular simulations” (1015). Everything is for sale, everything is commodified and put on display, including sex, love, intimacy, and marriage (1015). However Grande’s central concern is “how the culture industry (re) produces exhibitions of self and other” that work “to consolidate whiteness and secure settler futurity” (1015). Here Grande refers to the intellectual genealogy of the term futurity, which she traces back to John L. O’Sullivan’s treatise on manifest destiny “as an exclusively settler construct that is incommensurable with Indigeneity” (1015).
I don’t know what she means, so I start looking. In “The Great Nation of Futurity,” John O’Sullivan describes the United States as “destined to be the great nation of futurity” because “the principle upon which a nation is organized fixes its destiny, and that of equality is perfect, is universal,” a “self-evident dictate of morality, which accurately defines the duty of man to man, and consequently man’s rights as man” (O’Sullivan 426). “How many nations have had their decline and fall, because the equal rights of the minority were trampled on by the despotism of the majority; or the interests of the many sacrificed to the aristocracy of the few; or the rights and interests of all given up to the monarchy of one?” O’Sullivan asks (426). The irony of the first clause in that sentence is powerful, if one considers it in the light of settler colonialism, but O’Sullivan’s belief in American equality is absolutely serious. “America is destined for better deeds,” he continues. “It is our unparalleled glory that we have no reminiscences of battle fields, but in defence of humanity, of the oppressed of all nations, of the rights of conscience, the rights of personal enfranchisement. Our annals describe no scenes of horrid carnage, where men were led on by hundreds of thousands to slay one another, dupes and victims to emperors, kings, nobles, demons in the human form called heroes” (427). Given that O’Sullivan was writing during the bloody removals of Indigenous peoples from areas east of the Mississippi to what became Oklahoma, removals known as the “Trail of Tears,” his blindness to the bloodiness of colonialism in his country is breathtaking, but it’s no more surprising, perhaps, than the blindnesses of settler Canadians to their own country’s ongoing colonial behaviour.
For O’Sullivan, the past has little interest; it’s the “far-reaching, the boundless future,” which “will be the era of American greatness,” that draws his attention (427). “In its magnificent domain of space and time, the nation of many nations is destined to manifest to mankind the excellence of divine principles; to establish on earth the noblest temple ever dedicated to the worship of the Most High—the Sacred and the True,” he writes (427). The divine and democratic political principles of the United States will be made concrete in “the glorious destiny” (427). “Yes, we are the nation of progress, of individual freedom, of universal enfranchisement,” O’Sullivan writes:
Equality of rights it the cynosure of our union of States, the grand exemplar of the correlative equality of individuals; and while truth sheds its effulgence, we cannot retrograde, without dissolving the one and subverting the other. We must onward to the fulfilment of our mission—to the entire development of the principle of our organization—freedom of conscience, freedom of person, freedom of trade and business pursuits, universality of freedom and equality. This is our high destiny, and in nature’s eternal, inevitable decree of cause and effect we must accomplish it. All of this will be our future history, to establish on earth the moral dignity and salvation of man—the immutable truth and beneficence of God. For this blessed mission to the nations of the world, which are shut out from the life-giving light of truth, has America been chosen; and her high example shall smite unto death the tyranny of kings, hierarchs, and oligarchs, and carry the glad tidings of peace and good will where myriads now endure an existence scarcely more enviable than that of the beasts of the field. Who, then, can doubt that our country is destined to be the great nation of futurity? (429-30)
The divine mission of the United States guarantees its destiny, its role as the great nation of the future. That seems to be the way O’Sullivan is using the word “futurity” here—as “The quality, state, or fact of being future,” “the future; a future time” (O.E.D.)—rather than the more complex definition provided by Ben Anderson, who suggests that futurity is the anticipation of the future in the present (777-78). If Grande’s sense of futurity is established by a genealogy that begins with O’Sullivan’s text, then she must be thinking of futurity in the same way. I’ve spent time tracing the source of that genealogy, because denying settler futurity is a key tenet of settler-colonial discourse, and it’s important to understand the different ways the phrase “settler futurity” might be interpreted. For Grande, settler futurity is “incommensurable with Indigeneity,” perhaps because it necessarily involves, as Patrick Wolfe suggests, the genocidal process of the logic of elimination, or the replacement of Indigenous peoples by settlers. To be a settler is to participate in that logic of elimination. I wonder if there’s any way for a settler to step outside of that logic, or if, as Memmi suggests, that is an impossibility.
Grande states that “insofar as spectacle is contingent upon the radical reification of self, an overvaluing of the present, and rupturing of relationality, it becomes the perfect theater for producing anchorless (neoliberal) subjects whose every desire is increasingly structured by capital” (1015-16). Her emphasis on relationality here is important, because it shows how her argument is rooted in Indigenous epistemologies or cosmologies. “As it forecloses relationality by normalizing disconnection,” spectacle “effects an erasure of Indigenous peoples who continue to define themselves through relationship—to land, to history, to waters, to all our relations” (1016). She suggests that the water protectors at Standing Rock “were only rendered visible through spectacle,” and that before they were attacked by police using armoured vehicles and water cannons, “the Lakota peoples hardly existed, virtually erased from public consciousness,” and that even independent media (which I assume were critical of the state’s response to the water protectors) “deployed spectacle as a means of drawing attention” (1016). “The nonspectacular reality was that the majority of the time at the Oceti Sakowin encampment was spent in prayer, cooking, training, eating, laughing, building, teaching, working, washing, cleaning, singing, listening, reading, and tending,” she writes (1016). The spectacle of Standing Rock required the Lakota to act as “stand-ins for the ‘shame’ of America,” she continues (1016). That must be their function as spectacle. In reality, though, Standing Rock “has long served as a site of collective, anti-colonialist, anti-capitalist Indigenous resistance,” with the Lakota on the front lines “protecting against the forces of US imperialism” (1016). That long and multilayered history of “the architecture of settler violence is lost “to the compressed space of spectacular time” (1016).
Next, Grande shifts to defining her terms. I’m going to focus on her definition of spectacle, because that’s the term I’m most curious about. She quotes Debord’s definition of spectacle as the “social relationship between people that is mediated by images” (1019). Through the passive consumption of spectacles, she states, we are separated from the production of our own lives (she cites Steven Best and Douglas Kellner on this point) (1019). Spectacle annihilates historical knowledge, because it is focused on what is new, and it is a form of non-coercive power (she cites Crary here). “Debord’s central thesis or provocation is that life in a ‘commodity-saturated, mass-mediated, image-dominated and corporate-constructed world’ engenders an increasingly isolated, alienated, and passive citizenry that unwittingly relents to a groupthink of market consciousness disguised as individual agency,” she continues, citing Richard L. Kaplan (1019). Kaplan’s analysis, she writes, “illuminates the inherent paradox of spectacle; despite (or because of) its intention to [elicit] emotion and (re)action, spectacle produces alienation and passivity” (1019). Because the spectacle is “both dialectical and self-perpetuating,” the individual and social ennui it produces “searches for relief from the deadening effect and, in so doing, activates the production of ever more spectacular imagery, generating an endless and alienating cycle of (simulated) life in search of the ‘real’” (1019). That search for what is perceived as “authentic” as an antidote to postmodernity is related to settler colonialism, since “Indian-ness” has always served “as a favored foil (antidote) for whiteness” (1019-20). “How does the expressed desire for the imagined Indian serve the propertied interests of whiteness, which is to say settler statecraft?” Grande asks (1020). Her exploration of “expressions of Indian-as-spectacle” is an attempt at answering that question (1020).
That exploration begins with a discussion of reality television shows about life on the “frontier” or in the “wild” as evidence of “settler-desire for the imperialist fantasy of ‘pre-modernist’ times,” a desire which appeases “settler supremacy” (1020). Indigenous peoples are eliminated from view in those programs, which is central to “a deep-[seated] need to continually perform the fabled journey from savage to civilized over and over again; settler-subjects playong out fantasies of the colonial encounter as theater” (1020). Grande cites Lakota scholar Phil Deloria’s discussion of “how the oscillation between settler desire and repulsion for Indian-ness has manifested through the long-standing practice of ‘playing Indian,’” which goes back to the 1773 Boston Tea Party (1020-21). She quotes British media theorist Nick Couldry on the way that “every system of cruelty requires its own theatre” (qtd. 1021). She applies Couldry’s reasoning to settler colonialism:
(a) Settler colonialism is a system of cruelty.
(b) The “truths” of which are unacceptable to democratic society if stated openly.
(c) Those truths must be “translated into ritual that enacts, as ‘play,’ an acceptable version of the values and compulsions on which that cruelty depends.” (Couldry, qtd. 1021)
Reality television is an example of a theater of cruelty where “the rituals of everyday life under settler colonialism are ‘enacted as play’” in order to legitimate is practices and institutions (1021). According to Grande, “mediated performances that erase or perpetuate gross caricatures of Native peoples have systemic impact” that damages Indigenous peoples (1021). She writes, “as mediated, spectacularized versions of ‘the Indian’ dominate the collective consciousness of settler society, it functions to erase the lived experience of Indigenous peoples: hypervisibility = invisibility. In other words, spectacle facilitates ‘imperialist nostalgia’ and the passive consumption of Indigenous performance at the expense of actual Indigenous voices and histories” (1022). Thus Standing Rock protestors became hypervisible while Lakota people remained invisible (1022).
“While Indigenous peoples have long lived the material realities of US imperialism,” Grande continues, “settlers are only recently beginning to contemplate the impact of authoritarian rule and capitalist accumulation” (1023). Television programs that feature the lives of the wealthy present spectacles of wealth rather than lived experience, mitigating and normalizing social and economic inequality (1023). This phenomenon explains the rise of Donald Trump as a political figure (1024). Because he shares little with his base, “the presentation of his own whiteness has to be so spectacular” (1024). Meanwhile, the “intensification of cruelty under neoliberalism” has drawn “the liberal subject (i.e., ‘benevolent colonizer’) into its theater, raising the bar for even more spectacular productions of American exceptionalism, which is to say settler supremacy” (1024). So Trump’s rallies normalize white nationalism and the far right (1025).
Grande quotes Memmi’s suggestion that “colonization can only disfigure the colonizer” (qtd. 1025; 147) and that settler subjects ends up with an impossible choice: to either live in guilt, shame and anguish at the way they benefit from injustice, or to choose to confirm the colonial system (1025). For Grande, “therein lies the essence of settler ‘uneasiness’” (1025). “The apparent hopelessness of the setter problem raises important questions about the structure and potential of social movements, coalition building, and the possibility of transformation,” she contends (1025).
Grande suggests that Standing Rock presents a vision for an Indigenous future, but that to realize that vision, “it is up to all of us to see and work past the glimmer of spectacle, to resist the cult of the immediate, and to do the more deliberative work of history, earnestly connecting past with present” (1025). Doing this work “requires a collective refusal to participate in the theater of cruelty and choose instead to dismantle the settler consciousness that enables it. Such efforts entail working beyond and below the surface, keeping an eye toward the processes by which relations of mutuality are either abandoned or eroded by relations of capital—to in effect, decolonize” (1025). This definition of decolonization is not the same as the one presented by Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang, on which many writers and scholars seem to rely. Indigenous peoples are important in that struggle “because they represent the most enduring and resilient entities that present a competing moral vision to the settler order” (1026). “Settlers desiring to be accomplices in the decolonial project need to assume the stance of advocate (not spectator) for Indigenous rights,” Grande continues, and for the transformation of settler consciousness (1026). The alternatives to neoliberal capitalism are Indigenous, she suggests, citing Glen Coulthard, because Indigenous struggles are “built on history and ancestral knowledge” and “the responsibility to uphold relations of mutuality” (1026). “Attention to these teachings requires resistance and refusal of the fast, quick, sleek, and spectacular in favor of the steady, tried, consistent, and intergenerational,” and a replacement of individualism with relationship (1026). She quotes Debord: “the spectacle is ‘the reigning method of social organization of a paralyzed history, of a paralyzed memory, of an abandonment of any history founded in historical time,’” and this “‘false consciousness of time’” must be refused (1026). To refract social justice movements “through an Indigenous lens compels us to be attentive to both the larger ontological and epistemic underpinnings of settler colonialism; to discern the relationship between our struggles and others; to disrupt complicity and ignite a refusal of the false promises of capitalism,” Grande writes. The agenda for the anti-capitalist resistance was set long ago: “It is about land and defense of land. Land is our collective past, our present, and our future. This is our one demand” (1027).
Grande’s essay suggests the ways that Debord’s The Society of the Spectacle might be useful for my research, and I should read it sooner rather than later. However, I was surprised at being reminded about Alberto Memmi’s The Colonizer and the Colonized, a book I read in 2019 but had forgotten about. It is central to my research, and I need to return to it, particularly for the paper I’m working on right now. Memmi’s book might be the key to that paper’s argument, and yet had I not read Grande’s essay, I would have forgotten that key existed.
Works Cited
Anderson, Ben. “Preemption, Precaution, Preparedness: Anticipatory Action and Future Geographies.” Progress in Human Geography, vol. 34, no. 6, 2010, pp. 777-98.
Baloy, Natalie J.K., “Spectacles and Spectres: Settler Colonial Spaces in Vancouver.” Settler Colonial Studies, vol. 6, no. 3, 2016, pp. 209-34. https://doi.org/10.1080/2201473X.2015.1018101.
Grande, Sandy. “Refusing the Settler Society of the Spectacle.” Handbook of Indigenous Education, edited by Elizabeth Ann McKinley and Linda Tuhiwai Smith, Springer, 2019, pp. 1013-29.
Memmi, Albert. The Colonizer and the Colonized, expanded edition, Beacon, 1991.
“Complicated Pathways: Settler Canadians Learning to Re/Frame Themselves and Their Relationships with Indigenous Peoples,” a collaboration between Lynne Davis, Chris Hiller, Cherylanne James, Kristen Lloyd, Tessa Nasca, and Sara Taylor, is another article my friend Matthew Anderson suggested I read. The paper begins with the release of the final report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Indian Residential Schools and, in particular, its 94 “Calls to Action” and the federal government’s stated intention to implement them. “It is too tempting to think we have entered a unique moment in the history of Indigenous-settler relations in Canada,” the authors write, but they recollect the attempts to develop partnerships and “agreements based on mutual understandings” between settlers and Indigenous peoples in the past, which “were swept away by the structures, processes, values, greed and actions of the settler colonial state, its industrial capitalist economic imperatives and its well-indoctrinated citizens” (398-99). They note that the term “reconciliation” has been extensively critiqued, and that Haudenosaunee scholar Taiaiake Alfred has advocated for “restitution” as first step towards changing the status quo in Canada. Many Canadians happily adopt the position of “helper,” they note, citing the efforts at resettling Syrian refugees in 2015 as an example, but “[l]ess comfortable—if not unthinkable—is the entanglement of Canadians in colonial violence, the removal of Indigenous people from ancestral homelands and the perpetuation of cultural genocide” (399). They note that many Canadians see no connection between themselves and the events that took place in residential schools (399).
“What will help shift the consciousness of contemporary Canadians to a new story, where Canadians recognize and acknowledge themselves as occupiers of Indigenous homelands, perpetrators of cultural genocide and sustainers of settler colonial practices in the present?” the authors ask (399). How can settler Canadians become unsettled in their daily lives, where Indigenous peoples may be invisible? (399). Providing education and information is not enough, as decades of research indicates, because “Canadians have a deep emotional and cultural investment in the status quo and are the beneficiaries of past and present injustices, particularly with respect to the occupation of Indigenous lands which settlers consider to be their own” (399). Decolonization, they continue, citing Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang and Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, requires the return of land, and “[i]f Canadians are to move toward concrete conversations about land, there is an important foundation to be laid” which “will require a significant re-shaping of settler consciousness and the deep attachments that construct Canadian identities” (399).
“Insights from anti-racist, anti-oppressive pedagogical practices point to the emotionality of learning in which one’s own investments and identities are called into question and the need to embrace a ‘pedagogy of discomfort,’” the authors state (400). The literature on such pedagogical practices “points to the complexity of changing the consciousness of Canadians so that they hear and understand the voices of Indigenous peoples” (400). “The literatures on alliance building and solidarities emphasize the importance of learning and self-education as a critical part of the relationship process,” they continue (400).
This paper addresses these complex challenges “by reporting on a project that has documented many initiatives and events underway which are aimed at changing the way in which Canadians think about historical and contemporary Indigenous-non-Indigenous relationships” (400). That project, which began in 2014, came out of an undergraduate course at Trent University, and it addressed the unsettling questions involved “in trying to think through what it means to take up historic and generational responsibilities in intervening in the narratives that sustain settler colonial mechanisms” (400). That project involved a website that documented “initiatives being undertaken that attempt to reshape settler historic consciousness and transform Indigenous-non-Indigenous relations” (400-01). At the time of writing, that website listed over 200 projects. It was being updated and expanded every year by students in the course that initiated the project.
The project’s working definition of “transformation of settler consciousness” is grounded in the writing of scholars Patrick Wolfe, Paulette Regan, and Susan Dion (401). It is “firmly rooted” in Wolfe’s argument that settler colonialism is an ongoing process. It uses Regan’s contention that “settler consciousness” is “the narratives, practices, and collective Canadian identity that are based solidly in a foundation of national historical myths” which “pervade all spheres of society” (401). And it draws from Dion’s description of “the school system as a place of historical erasure, where counter-narratives are denied space, and countless stories are silenced” (401). Regan points out that it is easier “for settlers to live in denial than to unlearn ‘truths’ and engage with counter-narratives—an inherently uncomfortable and unsettling process,” and from that understanding the group set out to discover “how to create conditions in which individuals choose to engage and act, instead of deny” (401). The research also drew on Davis’s book, Alliances: Re/envisiooning Indigenous-non-Indigenous Relationships, which “demonstrates the complexity of Indigenous-non-Indigenous relations in contemporary Canada” and “the dangers that can arise from even the best intentioned deeds when they are not rooted in a critical, self-reflexive consciousness and understanding of history, and how instead they can perpetuate and deepen paternalistic colonial relationships, often causing more harm than good” (401-02).
Based in this work, then, the group understands transforming settler consciousness in the following ways:
Creating narratives, processes and practices that hold settlers accountable to their responsibilities and beneficiaries of colonization, both historic and ongoing.
Naming and upsetting the status quo, and challenging the power dynamics that perpetuate settler colonialism.
Building just and decolonized relationships with Indigenous peoples, the land, and all beings.
Engaging in an ongoing, complex and dynamic process grounded in a lifetime commitment, which occurs at the level of the individual, family, community, and nation. (402)
They realize that changing consciousness is not synonymous with or sufficient for decolonization; it must be paired with action or settlers may never move beyond guilt and shame, but they contend that transforming settler consciousness is “an uncomfortable but necessary first step in a lifelong and urgent journey of dismantling colonial systems and structures” (402).
The research the group conducted focused on online sources and media coverage, and they used a WordPress blog to present the research. The four-month timeframe for the project was a problem, and they found that it was impossible to develop “an exhaustive collection in nits initial development” (403). Some types of initiatives were excluded; the research was limited to work happening inside Canada, “despite our acknowledgement of borders as colonial constructs, and the fact that the work of the documented initiatives often transcended them” (403). Keeping the website up-to-date is an ongoing challenge. By May 2015, they had catalogued over 200 projects in 16 main categories, although some initiatives didn’t fit neatly into those divisions and had to be included in more than one category. They also note that “the language and understanding of ‘settler’ as advanced in settler colonial studies” is rarely used outside of a small number of academics and activist groups, and so the projects they included were rooted in other discourses (405). However, “the framing of initiatives” evolved rapidly, with the term “reconciliation,” for instance, becoming more important after the release of the TRC’s final report (406).
Their analysis of these initiatives noted a number of tensions. Few of the projects they included used the terms “settler” or “colonization,” which are “deeply discomforting and at times defensively dismissed” (406). When that language is not used, however, “critical insights about the nature and workings of settler colonial society are lost, and liberal discourses based in notions of equality and social justice persist” (406). That framing might engage more people in events or issues, but “it does not position non-Indigenous Canadians as beneficiaries of colonization” or “imply specific responsibilities and commitments on the part of non-Indigenous Canadians to challenge or undo current colonizing practices or structures,” limiting their transformative potential (406). On the other hand, some projects demonstrated a mastery of “the art of using decolonial rhetoric” without a similar mastery of substantive action (406). Another tension the study revealed was “knowing how big a role Indigenous peoples should play in settler education and in striking a balance between, on the one hand, learning from Indigenous peoples, knowledge and pedagogies, and on the other, settlers taking responsibility for their own education and unlearning of dominant narratives and histories” (407). A third tension involved knowing how to raise critical questions about initiatives without undermining their value (407).
The research also generated concerns about the projects the group documented. The focus and goals of many initiatives “were not implemented to address the needs of Indigenous peoples, or to offer the support that Indigenous communities are actually seeking” (407). The failure of many initiatives to consider colonialism as an ongoing process, particularly government and corporate cultural competency training programs, did not address “the underlying issues and contemporary ramifications” (407). Few of the projects addressed “questions of land reclamation, reparations, Indigenous sovereignty and jurisdiction, or Canadian sovereignty on stolen Indigenous lands”; instead, most “focused on liberal goals of ‘raising awareness’ or imparting information,” suggesting that awareness is the “end game” of decolonization (408). Projects focused on Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women, for instance, failed to grasp “Indigenous understandings of the larger settler colonial context in which MMIW is embedded” and thus “do not challenge settler positionalities in any fundamental way” (408). Most initiatives involved settler “moves to innocence” because they asked participants to do nothing more than listen (408). Such projects “may succeed in making settlers feel good about themselves while failing to promote substantive change” (408).
The research raised important questions. How do we move beyond easy or superficial changes? Will straightforward changes in understanding and consciousness “have the power to facilitate greater, more substantive shifts in the future?” (408-09). How can a “movement toward the next stage of thought and action in the transformation process, in which the realities of settler colonialism and consciousness are understood plainly, and the land and Indigenous sovereignty are central to discussions of reconciliation,” be fostered (409)? In addition, what would constitute a challenge to settler colonial positionality? Is “the centring of Indigenous perspectives and leadership, and the related decentering of settler narratives,” in themselves unsettling or transformational (409)? How, the authors ask, “do we get to the stage where settlers are both engaging with and centering Indigenous knowledge and narratives (learning) while simultaneously deconstructing settler identities (unlearning), and actively challenging settler colonial practices of Indigenous displacement and settler encroachment?” (409).
Alliances and coalitions are sites of learning and transformation, particularly for settlers, the authors continue; projects that bring “settler Canadians into contact with Indigenous spiritual ceremonies, protocols, and cultural practices,” for example, can open “their eyes and minds to other ways of being in the universe” (409). “Such contact,” they write, “brings challenges to the Canadian narratives that undergird Canadian historical consciousness” (409). They refer to Davis’s research into what members of a social-justice group had learned and how their perspectives had shifted over time. Conversations were important in this learning, but that observation raises the question of which voices end up with enough credibility to make changes happen. In addition, “despite providing deep analyses and insightful critiques of Canadian society, participants did not talk about themselves as beneficiaries of Indigenous dispossession from their homelands” (410). That’s because of the power settler colonial narratives have to naturalize settlers on the land while making Indigenous peoples invisible (410).
“When taken together, the large number of diverse initiatives collected on the Transforming Relations website offers the suggestion of momentum for change,” but “we cannot lose sight of the need to ‘unsettle’ the settler colonial logic, narratives and practices embedded in everyday write,” the authors state (410). More research is necessary “to explore the dynamic interplay of forces that impact the complex layers of settler consciousness transformation,” particularly research that is focused on “the simultaneous processes of learning and unlearning that are engaged in any ongoing journey of decolonization and change” (410). There are theoretical resources that explore “the challenges of transforming settler consciousness and disrupting settler colonialism,” including work by Margaret Heffernan, Paulette Regan, and Megan Boler and Michalinos Zembylas, but the authors seem to be suggesting that there is a gap between that theory and the actual practice of change. I’m not surprised, though, given the big ambitions of the theory and the practical difficulties of convincing people to leave settled positions of comfort for unsettled positions of discomfort. If one is offered a discursive or ideological position in which one’s futurity is denied—and that’s what I see in arguments like those of Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang, which condemn notions of settler futurity—one is likely to be unwilling to accept that positioning.
The final point the authors raise about transforming settler consciousness is “that it requires ‘engaging in an ongoing, complex, and dynamic process grounded in a lifetime commitment, which occurs at the level of the individual, family, community, and nation’” (they are quoting themselves here) (411). “Each of the initiatives documented on the Transforming Relations website represent[s] entry points to different stages in this unfolding process, not panaceas for transformation in and of themselves,” they write. “Our analysis showed that most of these initiatives represent early ‘learning’ stages, and that a disconnect exists between these and later stages that actually confront settler positionalities and privilege” (411). More research and analysis of the projects their work documents is needed. Nevertheless, the study of the transformation of settler consciousness “is unfolding through different disciplines through the study of the complex psychological and sociological demands involved in shifting the way the beneficiaries of colonization come to see their place in relation to Indigenous peoples” (411). What are the conditions “that help settlers turn toward, and acknowledge, their own implication in the settler colonial project” (411)? What kind of pedagogy can bring about change instead of “denial or paralyzing guilt” (411)? The momentum represented by the projects documented on the Transforming Relations website needs to be “strategically analyzed” and “future efforts” will need to “seek to understand the conditions that allow the move from simply acknowledging, to meaningfully transforming settler consciousness, in a way that furthers processes of decolonization and supports Indigenous resurgence and nationhood” (411).
The Transforming Relations project is interesting; the website is still live, although it doesn’t seem to have been updated recently, and the questions the authors raise about settler decolonization are important ones. They are the questions I’ve been grappling with, although I’m a little less sanguine about the possibilities for the kinds of change they are calling on settlers to embrace. I wonder what the kind of pedagogy the authors ask about in their conclusion might look like, for instance. I noticed a tremendous level of shame and guilt in my students last semester whenever we discussed Indigenous issues, and that’s simply not sustainable. Yes, settlers have benefitted from Indigenous dispossession, but at the same time, people need to be offered something other than a negative conception of themselves or they will refuse to engage. I don’t know how settlers could be offered a positive conception of themselves, given the realities of ongoing colonization, and I don’t know how substantive change—the repatriation of land that Tuck and Wang call for—can take place given the realities of settler occupation of land. Is decolonization, in the end, a zero-sum game, where one side wins while the other loses? If so, what could convince a majority of settlers to participate? I don’t have answers to these questions; I don’t know how to move from the theory of settler decolonization to its practice. I wonder if anyone does. I will have to keep reading to find out.
Works Cited
Davis, Lynne, Chris Hiller, Cherylanne James, Kristen Lloyd, Tessa Nasca, and Sara Taylor. “Complicated Pathways: Settler Canadians Learning to Re/Frame Themselves and Their Relationships with Indigenous Peoples.” Settler Colonial Studies, vol. 7, no. 4, 2017, pp. 398-414. https://doi.org/10.1080/2201473X.2016.1243086.
Chris Hiller’s article, “Tracing the Spirals of Unsettlement: Euro-Canadian Narratives of Coming to Grips with Indigenous Sovereignty, Title, and Rights,” is yet another text that my friend Matthew Anderson suggested I read. “The challenge of bridging the chasm that persists between Indigenous peoples and newcomers to their territories in Canada raises pressing questions about learning and decolonization in contexts of settler colonialism—questions that revolve around the settler colonial imaginary and how to disrupt it,” Hiller begins (415). A range of decolonization strategies have resulted from attempts at disrupting “this resilient and entrenched imaginary,” he continues, “from disrupting colonizing discourses within classrooms and in broader society, to challenging foundational settler mythologies and narratives, to highlighting vested state interests in Indigenous dispossession, to interrogating settler colonial power relations” (415). (A footnote suggests several texts by Indigenous and settler writers and scholars that describe these efforts at disruption.) In this study, Hiller draws upon her dissertation, which looked at “the experiences and trajectories of learning of 22 Euro-Canadians—white settlers—who have demonstrated long-term commitments to supporting Indigenous struggles over land, rights, and sovereignty” (415).
Hiller’s narrative inquiry study uses Cree scholar Willie Ermine’s discussion of “the ethical space of engagement”—an article that one of my supervisors gave me and which I left behind in my office on campus when the pandemic began—to look for “common trajectories of learning that appear when reading across the interviews and considering them collectively in light of scholarship in the areas of de/colonization, pedagogy, and Indigenous land” (416). By exploring “what these white settler activists have to say about the experiences, contexts, processes, and conditions that give rise to their own decolonization,” Hiller intends “to theorize the contours of an unsettled and unsettling spatial consciousness: a form of critical praxis that seeks to disrupt settler colonial pedagogies and practices that undergird the subjugation of Indigenous peoples and the continued theft and destruction of their lands” (416).
The attitudes of some settler Canadians are changing, Hiller notes, and yet a recent Environics survey “reveals a continuity of entrenched colonizing assumptions and attitudes among non-Indigenous Canadians,” including a finding that 60% of respondents do not see themselves as benefitting from the discriminatory treatment Indigenous peoples experience (416). “These enduring attitudes represent one manifestation of what many describe as the ‘colonial present’ in Canada: an ever-evolving and shifting continuity of practices that displace Indigenous peoples, both symbolically and materially, in order to reiteratively emplace non-Indigenous people—most notably white settlers—as the supposed owners, occupiers, and arbiters of the land,” she writes (416). Those practices are reflected by the federal government’s attempt to avoid ratifying the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous peoples; in its “continued refusal to honour Treaties as nation-to-nation agreements,” which can be seen in the existence of “hundreds of outstanding specific claims related to centuries-old breaches of those early agreements”; and in the demands that First Nations “extinguish” their Aboriginal title to their territories in modern treaty negotiations (417). It is also reflected in the legislation that aims to establish “‘certainty’ regarding (Crown) title and jurisdiction” and to offload “federal fiduciary responsibilities” (417). In its most concrete form, she continues, “the operation of present-day machineries of colonization is evident in on-the-ground struggles in Indigenous communities” (417). “The common denominator underlying all of these symbolic and material practices—indeed, the raison d’être of settleer colonialism itself—remains the imperative to clear, claim, settle, and assert jurisdiction and sovereignty over Indigenous lands,” she writes, quoting the suggestion of philosopher James Tully (someone I should read) that this appropriation of land and resources is “‘the territorial foundation of the dominant society itself’” (qtd. 417). Colonization is not something that happened in the past; it continues in the present, and it is and always has been about the land (417).
Many scholars have tracked “the reproduction of this on-going colonial present”—“the ways in which settler identities, spaces, sense of home and place, and constructions of land and nation are brought into being, secured, and enforced through an interplay of settler colonial spatial technologies: an evolving set of mechanisms and practices that function to clear the land discursively, materially and violently of its Indigenous occupants/owners in order to make way for (white) settlement and development”—in order “to theorize its disruption” (417). These discursive and material practices generate the settler imagination, and the “imagined yet never fully accomplished possession of Indigenous lands runs to the very heart of settler identities, cultures, and social and political formations” (417). Therefore, “Indigenous assertions of sovereignty, territory, and rights and relations to land figure as threats to an already-threatened national identity, unity, space, industrial capitalist economy, and sense of legitimacy,” prompting “a range of recuperative efforts on the part of individual settlers, settler communities, and the settler nation state” (417-18). Those efforts—which include discursive, symbolic, and physical violent responses to Indigenous assertions of rights and identity—remain “the constitutive heart of settler colonialism” and serve “as the disavowed lynchpin of dominant cultural pedagogies in Canada” (418).
“Given the ways in which colonizing responses to Indigenous sovereignty and rights and relations to land are so deeply woven into the fabric of settler societies and cultures, any meaningful re-cognition of these relations—one that acknowledges and addresses on-going histories of Indigenous dispossession and settler dominance—will profoundly rock the very foundations of such settler societies, cultures, and identities,” Hiller writes (418). Ideas of unsettling settlers, of living in discomfort,
thus pose quandaries that run far deeper than mere questions of political or educational strategy: given the social, cultural, political, and discursive practices and environments that work so diligently to obscure, deny, and erase the realities of Indigenous sovereignty, territory, and rights and relation to land in settler states, how do non-Indigenous people—and particularly those positioned as hegemonic subjects within such states—come to perceive, and come to grips with, these foundation-rocking realities of our existence? Further, by what processes do settlers come to act in recognition of these realities, and what implications do such forms of recognition have for the ways in which we imagine and actively emplace ourselves here, on Indigenous lands? (418)
The latter question is the one I’m particularly interested in: what are settlers to do in the face of the reality that we live on Indigenous land? What response are we called upon to make? What might settler decolonization—or perhaps decolonization from a settler perspective—mean?
Hiller interviewed 22 settlers who had been active in supporting Indigenous struggles—what form that activity took is not clear—and used narrative analysis to explore their stories and the ways that “each narrator draws upon and contests dominant constructions of settler identity, belonging, land, and nation” (418). She is particularly interested in what her reseasrch participants “identify as critical turning points—pivotal moments that spark or mark their shift into a decolonizing praxis in relation to Indigenous sovereignty and rights”—along with “the discourses, cultural repertoires, metaphors, and symbols that they draw upon in their narratives and activist practices” (418). All of her participants lived in southern Ontario “and thus negotiated home and place as settlers living on Indigenous lands that were supposedly ‘ceded’ by Indigenous nations through the Upper Canada Treaties prior to Confederation” (418-19). The demographics of her participants suggest that their stories “articulate a standpoint of social, political, economic, and spatial dominance in Canada” (419). While many scholars “caution against projects that recenter non-Indigenous interests and identities in general and stoke a self-serving preoccupation with settler perspectives and emotions in particular,” Hiller suggests, in her defence, that she approaches her participants’ stories “not as narratives of redemption, but as imperfect and unfinished yet critical resources for envisaging and working through the trap that dominantly positioned settlers find ourselves in under settler colonialism” (419). Her participants told stories “that featured the shattering of cherished illusions and deeply held assumptions that seemed tied to a racially unmarked position of social and spatial dominance; some went so far as to articulate an explicit process of coming to consciousness of the constitutive relationship between Indigenous dispossession, regimes of property, and white privilege” (419). To “unsettle the on-going reproduction of settler privilege,” Hiller writes, we must look at “those who remain the ‘intended beneficiaries’ of colonization, both past and present—settlers of European descent” (419).
Hiller looks at the stories told by her research participants through Ermine’s “elaboration of ethical space” (420). Ermine begins with a thought experiment, in which Indigenous and Western “thought worlds” collide in ways “that undergird Western domination and Indigenous subjugation” (420). (So far, that sounds less like a thought experiment and more like history.) The space “afforded by the contrast of these autonomous thought worlds,” according to Ermine, is “a liminal space of possibility” in which settlers “come to encounter the fissures, contradictions, and inconsistencies within Western culture, society, and knowledge” (420). In addition, in the spaces where those thought worlds clash, “the Western gaze is met by an Indigenous counter-gaze” which, like a mirror, shows settlers something about “our own colonizing mindsets, practices, and societies” (420). “Ermine suggests that for non-Indigenous people to enter an ethical space of engagement with Indigenous peoples, we must actively seek out this return gaze, approaching what we are able to perceive of Indigenous knowledges, cultures, and lived material realities as critical resources for turning to see anew our own culture and to pull at deeply enfolded assumptions and power relations,” Hiller writes (420-21).
For Hiller, the stories of her research participants in that space of encounter are “a series of forays into spaces born of colliding thought worlds” (421). The activists she interviewed entered that space for many reasons, but an identification with social justice is one overarching factor she identifies in their stories (421). More importantly, “each tells a story that pivots around specific moments of catching a glimpse in Ermine’s mirror. Such glimpses are necessarily partial, in large part due to the constraining weight of what Ermine describes as the ‘undercurrent’ of the Western thought world” (421). Nevertheless, her participants “speak of seeing past the overbearing weight of that undercurrent just for a moment, and catching sight of something else in that mirror: a glimpse of a fellow suffering human being; the specificity of a marginalized human community; a brief sighting of disavowed atrocities; an instance of inspirational resistance; the imagined basis of a common struggle” (421-22). For me, that moment was the realization that all of the stories I had been told about the justification for settlers living in the Haldimand Tract were untrue. Some of Hiller’s research participants had similarly indirect glimpses, but others had “deeply personal or embodied experiences” or even “startlingly visceral encounters that involve direct engagements with Indigenous people themselves, moments in which these non-Indigenous actors are called to account for who they are and how they emplace themselves” (422). In my case, learning about the ongoing history of the Haldimand Tract left me unable to respond to the challenges I imagined experiencing. I realized I had no defence, no way to justify my past presence on the Haldimand Tract or my present existence in Treaty 4 territory.
The encounters Hiller’s research participants talked about “disallow false separations of the colonial past from the colonial present” and “refuse the alibi of good intentions, demanding instead a deep interrogation and a public accounting of our personal implication in the on-going history of colonization” (422). They represent “momentary interruptions of on-going settler colonial relations: fissures that reveal unsettling truths about the violence at the heart of settler narratives, identities, and spaces” (422). Those interruptions, those glances in the mirror, cause us to lose our bearings and provoke “a range of unsettling emotions: anger, fear, threat, betrayal, guilt, shame” (422). And those momentary interruptions offer us a choice: we can either “avert our eyes long enough for these emotions to wane and for shape-shifting narratives to do their recuperative work, bridging across those unsettling contradictions” or, “if the encounter affects us in a way that is sufficiently personal, if the jar is powerful enough with sufficient affective weight, or if it is repeated, it may remain with us, embedding within us what one participant described as a ‘niggling question’ about Indigenous peoples, about this place, and about our relationship to both” (422). “In such moments,” Hiller continues, “we turn back to face the culture, society, and thought world that has formed us as well as the violence that we witness, a turning that sparks a cycle of reflection and action that draws us into decolonizing practices and new relations of responsibility” (422).
The stories Hiller’s research participants told her were all unique; each articulated “a specific set of positionalities, political frameworks, and commitments,” and drew upon “particular experiences and histories” and “engagements with Indigenous peoples, cultures, and realities within a specific context of colonization,” and as a result “each is shaped by corresponding and at times conflicting Indigenous demands for decolonization” (423). To understand those stories, Hiller turns to Ermine’s notion of the ethical space of engagement:
Here, I visualize the space opened up by intersecting thought worlds as that constituted by two overlapping circles: a space literally hemmed in by two sets of shifting boundaries that serve both to mark its outer limits. In this in-between space, each narrative appears as a series of choices regarding how a specific narrator orients within that space: choices about which direction to turn, and which curving edge of intersecting boundaries to face. (423)
Hiller’s analysis reveals
two distinct but interconnected and at times competing trajectories of decolonization: there is an upward spiral, focused outward, that entails non-Indigenous people witnessing and confronting historic and on-going colonial practices that dispossess and displace Indigenous peoples; there is also a downward spiral, focused inward, in which non-Indigenous people pull apart our own base assumptions, entrenched colonial mindsets, and deeply held investments in white settler privilege. (423)
That second spiral seems to resemble the process that Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang criticize as a “focus on decolonizing the mind, or the cultivation of critical consciousness, as if it were the sole activity of decolonization; to allow conscientization to stand in for the more uncomfortable task of relinquishing stolen land” (Tuck and Yang 19). According to Tuck and Yang, “the front-loading of critical consciousness building can waylay decolonization, even though the experience of teaching and learning to be critical of settler colonialism can be so powerful it can feel like it is indeed making change” (19). However, they continue, “Until stolen land is relinquished, critical consciousness does not translate into action that disrupts settler colonialism” (19). That may be true, but much has to happen before stolen land is returned, including changes in the assumptions and investments of settlers. Hiller addresses this point later on.
For Hiller, the upward spirals “describe cycles of reflection and action that ‘piece together the evidence’ regarding the machinations of settler colonialism and the specific ways that Indigenous dispossession and displacement are enacted and perpetuated in the present” (423). The narratives that Hiller considers as part of this category “are marked by convergences of anti-colonial knowledge and insight: spiraling ‘ah-hah’ realizations that settler colonialism is ‘all about the land’ and ‘it’s still going on’” (423-24). She imagines these spirals as cycling upward because
they represent cumulative shifts in settler consciousness: moments when white settlers find themselves ‘pushed over the edge’ and into action in solidarity with Indigenous peoples by virtue of ‘knowing too much’ about the injustices inherent to settler states; moments when their cumulative awareness forces them to choose sides in Indigenous struggles against various forms of settler encroachment, leaving them no option of turning back. (424)
In contrast, the downward spirals, “cycles of reflection and action that arise from a turn inward,” “trace participants’ experiences of grappling with what the gaze they encounter in the mirror has to tell them about who they are, particularly in relation to the land under their feet” (424). “Rather than upward-moving and cumulative,” Hiller writes, “I imagine these spirals of learning as iterative and downward-moving: they represent concerted and on-going efforts to clear out the undercurrent of racist and colonizing assumptions in order to move outside of the confining ‘cages of our mental worlds’” (she quotes Ermine here) (424-25). These stories can involve working through difficult emotions, which can include the “inculcated fears and the sense of threat that arises for many settlers in the fact of Indigenous peoples’ assertions to rights and relations to land” (425), and the guilt many settlers feel, which must be both challenged and used “as a form of critical intelligence regarding our deepest investments, both in settler colonial mindsets and privilege and in our own desires for an ethical place to stand” (425). These stories are also about “spiritual unsettlement,” of “being spiritually undone in relation to Indigenous peoples and their relations to land (425). They also involve “grappling with Indigenous difference” in a variety of ways, including by learning to pay attention “to intersecting sacred boundaries,” including Treaty relationships and the connections between humans and non-humans (425).
“Of course, any non-Indigenous engagement with Indigenous difference must also be read in relation to the continuity of Western imperialist and neocolonialist impulses to imagine, define, contain, impose, control, regulate, and police constructions of Indigenous difference,” Hiller writes, and as a result many of her research participants avoid engaging with Indigenous ceremonies, knowledges, and languages in order to avoid appropriation (425). For Hiller, though, this decision “also risks re-colonizing the space of engagement that Ermine describes” (426). She notes that Sami scholar Rauna Kuokkanen suggests that engaging in the gap between Indigenous and Western epistemes is “a means of reflexively turning back on ourselves as settlers,” and that “coming to a place of humility as well as responsibility in relation to Indigenous worldviews” is important (426). We need to pay attention “not only to the insights Indigenous epistemes might offer us, but also listen to hear what such epistemes might demand of us” (426). Unfortunately Hiller doesn’t cite Kuokkanen here, but I wonder if those ideas are discussed in her book, Reshaping the University: Responsibility, Indigenous Epistemes, and the Logic of the Gift, which I have yet to read (although I have a copy on my shelf).
The stories Hiller’s research participants told about engaging with Indigenous difference “gesture towards the ways in which processes of unsettling settler imaginaries are intricately tied up with and dependent upon Indigenous decolonization movements and resurgent cultural practices” (426). In addition, those stories “point to humility in the face of incommensurable epistemes—combined with a willingness to acknowledge and respect the implications of a worldview which one cannot fully conceive—as a critical star[t]ing point for non-Indigenous engagements with Indigenous sovereignty, title, and rights and relations to land” (426). In addition, and perhaps most profoundly, “narratives in this direction involve the unearthing and pulling apart of deep-seated investments in white settler privilege” (426).
These two forms of experience, which Hiller describes as “two cycles of praxis—the upward, anticolonial cycle and the downward, decolonizing cycle” (426), are deeply connected. The stories told by her research participants include elements of both trajectories, “often operating simultaneously and feeding into one another” (426). However, it is important to see them as distinct, to acknowledge the ways they can “compete, complicate, or even stall each other out” (426). That interplay echoes the work of Indigenous scholars, Hiller suggests, who both critique “the tendency of settler decolonization efforts to reify settler identities and interests without concretely supporting ‘the repatriation of Indigenous land and life’” (she cites Tuck and Wang here), and who challenge settlers who set out to act in solidarity to ask questions about “their identities, investments, and assumptions” (here she cites Lynn Gehl’s “Ally Bill of Responsibilities”) (426-27). “Indeed, the ethical space of engagement that Ermine imagines requires that these two trajectories of praxis—each representing processes entailing specific social, political, and personal dimensions and demands for accountability—be held in dynamic balance,” Hiller contends, because doing otherwise risks “stagnating consciousness development and reiterating settler colonial relations of power” (427). One critique that could be made about walking performance and settler decolonization is that it is too much focused on “deeply interrogating . . . identities, investments, and assumptions” (427), and that it ignores tangible, concrete action. A similar critique might be made of any artistic practice, though, which is one reason that people interested in settler decolonization or in working in anticolonial ways (to use Hiller’s distinction between those terms) are often pushed towards forms of social aesthetics or social practice.
Listening to Indigenous peoples—“their experiences, analyses, and aspirations”—is central to both “spirals of praxis,” according to Hiller (427). “Often, these processes of listening occur within, precipitate, or result from relationship-building with Indigenous peoples,” she states (427). Such relationships “help to disrupt colonialist assumptions and categories—both overtly racist and romanticizing—that essentialize and elide the multiplicity of difference among peoples, communities, and nations” (427). Relationships can also be the “site of unsettling moments of learning, and at times provide the conditions that sustain the process of unsettlement” (427). Relationships make “the abstractions of colonizing histories and realities” concrete (427). “It is personal relationships—with communities, with individuals—that provoke a deep sense of responsibility and accountability, demanding a cyclical return to analyze and dismantle colonizing structures,” Hiller writes (427). In fact, she points out that there is a substantial literature on ally formation which demonstrates “the role that relationships play in sparking, provoking, and sustaining processes of decolonizing settler consciousness” (428).
The learning processes Hiller’s research participants describe “point to the ways in which processes of settler decolonization are complicated by reversions: moments when learning is interrupted, diverted, or stalled out; moments when we, as settler subjects, seek to re-settle our privileged identities, positions, and claims to space and place” (428). Such reversions occur in many ways, but they “represent paternalistic re-impositions not only of agenda and process, but of analysis, values, and ways of knowing and being. In these moments, we as settlers risk returning unchanged from spaces of engagement with Indigenous peoples, with our colonizing imaginaries left intact—or worse, further buttressed and entrenched” (428). Trying to be a good settler—one of the exceptional few who “get it”—is an example of what Tuck and Yang describe as “settler moves to innocence” (qtd. 428). Hiller even suggests that moments of awkward laughter settlers share when they acknowledge “inadmissible knowledges and subjectivities” are “a cushioning distance from the full weight of the ‘difficult knowledges’ of which we speak and from a full realization of the violence that lurks beneath that thin veneer of our national and personal identities and claims to space and place” (428).
“Thus, despite occasional shifts in perspective and commitments that appear to be relatively enduring, the processes of coming to consciousness that I map here are iterative, inherently incomplete, and marked by disjuncture: they are cycles of awareness and unawareness, unsettlement and re-settlement, recognition and misrecognition, knowing and unknowing,” Hiller writes. “Shifts happen through repetition across time and space, and insights must often be re-learned or at times unlearned” (429). Several of Hiller’s research participants stated that the process was a “life-long learning curve” (429).
The recursive, iterative nature of the learning process suggests the difficulty of unsettling “settled expectations” (430). “Participants speak of facing inculcated fears of losing (white) privilege tied to their own settled expectations in relation to access to land, and of struggling against the lulling pull of complacency in the face of on-going colonial violence directed at racialized others,” Hiller writes. “Many of these narratives also constitute attempts to work through the mire of white settler guilt, and to articulate a specifically located set of responsibilities in relation to undoing settler colonialism and its corollary, white supremacy” (430). Whiteness plays out in the stories Hillier’s research participants tell in different ways. For instance, several participants noted that the act of supporting Indigenous struggles “demands a certain level of privilege tied to race and class: for not everyone is afforded the luxury of the time, resources, and distance from everyday struggles for survival that is necessary to become or to act consistently as an ally” (431). Hiller cites Celia Haig-Brown’s observation that “one of the defining features of white settler privilege is the choice about whether and how to engage in anti-colonial struggle . . . as well as the ability to engage without having to face violent consequences” (431). For Hiller, the stories of her research participants offer unique contributions “to our collective understanding of the contexts and processes underlying white settler dominance, its reproduction, and its disruption,” and the most valuable stories might be the ones “that elucidate the inevitable missteps in processes of decolonization that so often precipitate our most powerful moments of un/learning” (431).
The settler imaginary, Hiller concludes, “is born of a pervasive amnesia that depends upon and reifies an erasure of the presence, imprint, and very humanity of Indigenous peoples,” and this imaginary allows settlers to “envision ourselves as naturally occupying and belonging to the spaces and places of Indigenous peoples” (431-32). Her research, she states, “represents an empirical effort to consider how, in the context of a settler colonial present that continues to be ‘all about Indigenous land,’ white settlers begin to perceive, grapple with, and actively recognize and support the foundation-rocking realities of Indigenous sovereignty, territory, and rights and relations to land” (432). That process, she continues, is “complex, iterative, disjointed, and just plain messy” (432). She calls for more research into “the conditions, contexts, and practices that instigate, sustain, or interrupt” that process (432). In addition, she suggests that her research “makes plain the responsibilities of settlers in relation to personal and structural decolonization”; in other words, both “spirals of praxis,” the “cycles of reflection and action” must operate “in tandem and simultaneously” (432). “It is through commitments to these practices over time that we as non-Indigenous people occupying Indigenous lands might prepare ourselves to enter the decolonized space that Ermine describes,” Hiller concludes (432).
Hiller’s essay is important; I wish I had known about it when I was working on my MFA—I think it had been published at that point—but at least I’ve read it now. Her insights into the stories her research participants told her are applicable to the practices of settler artists or writers who are interested in decolonizing work, and they indicate potential strengths and weaknesses of such practices. I particularly like her recognition that processes of decolonization are repetitive and iterative. No process moves in a simple straight line. Her bibliography is also useful. It broadens my thinking, beyond the specifics of land acknowledgments, and that’s important. I might need to scan through the journal where this article was published, Settler Colonial Studies, to find other work on this topic. That’s a lot of work, it’s true, but sometimes keyword searches in a library database don’t capture all the material that’s available. If only I could find a quicker way to read and take notes on articles like this one that’s as thorough as writing a summary. How do others manage to read carefully and, more importantly, retain what they’ve read? I wish my mind worked that way.
Hiller, Chris. “Tracing the Spirals of Unsettlement: Euro-Canadian Narratives of Coming to Grips with Indigenous Sovereignty, Title, and Rights.” Settler Colonial Studies, vol. 7, no. 4, 2017, pp. 415-40. https://doi.org/10.1080/2201473X.2016.1241209.
Kuokkanen, Rauna. Reshaping the University: Responsibility, Indigenous Epistemes, and the Logic of the Gift, University of British Columbia Press, 2007.
My second reading on territory and treaty acknowledgements—another on the list I got from Matthew Anderson—a blog post by Métis writer (and lawyer) Chelsea Vowel, who blogs under the name âpihtawikosisân, the Cree word for “Métis.” Vowel is way ahead of settler-descendant writers on this topic, and her short discussion is important and valuable.
Vowel begins by noting that “Territorial acknowledgments have become fairly common in urban, progressive spaces in Canada,” and she notes that she had been hearing them for over 15 years at the time she was writing (âpihtawikosisân). She wants to ask several questions about these acknowledgments:
First, what is the purpose of these acknowledgments? Both what those making the territorial acknowledgments say they intend, as well as what Indigenous peoples think may be the purpose. Second, what can we learn about the way these acknowledgments are delivered? Are there best practices? Third, in what spaces do these acknowledgments happen and more importantly, where are they not found? Finally, what can exist beyond territorial acknowledgments? (âpihtawikosisân)
When these acknowledgements first began, Vowel continues, “they were fairly powerful statements of presence, somewhat shocking, perhaps even unwelcome in settler spaces. They provoked discomfort and centered Indigenous priority on these lands” (âpihtawikosisân). She disagrees with Bob Joseph’s suggestion that these acknowledgements can be a way of honouring traditional Indigenous territory protocols, however; such a suggestion, she argues, is dangerous. Another purpose is to make spaces which feel unsafe for Indigenous peoples, like settler-dominated universities, less alienating. “As a newer practice in such environments, territorial acknowledgments continue to have the power to disrupt and discomfit settler colonialism,” she states (âpihtawikosisân).
“It should also be emphasized that these territorial acknowledgments flow from the work of Indigenous peoples themselves, who are resisting invisibilization,” Vowel continues. “When they are crafted, they are usually done so in consultation with local Indigenous peoples” (âpihtawikosisân). At the same time, Indigenous critiques of territory acknowledgments are strongest in places like Vancouver, where such acknowledgments have existed for a long time, although Indigenous critiques can also exist where territory acknowledgments are relatively new.
“I believe territorial acknowledgments can have numerous purposes, and in fact can be repurposed, so merely examining the stated intentions of these invocations is insufficient,” Vowel writes. “What may start out as radical push-back against the denial of Indigenous priority and continued presence, may end up repurposed as ‘box-ticking’ inclusion without commitment to any sort of real change” (âpihtawikosisân). That is “the inevitable progression,” she suggests, “a situation of familiarity breeding contempt (or at least apathy)” (âpihtawikosisân).
The way these acknowledgments are delivered matters: “Are they formulaic recitations that barely penetrate the consciousness of the speaker and those listening? Are they something that must be ‘gotten through’ before the meeting or speech can begin? Can we escape dilution through repetition?” (âpihtawikosisân). In other words, she continues, “What do territorial acknowledgments mean for people who have heard them ad nauseum?” (âpihtawikosisân). “On the other hand,” she continues, “rituals and repetition are not necessarily bad things. Establishing a practice of acknowledgment can be part of wider attempts to address settler colonialism and build better relationships with Indigenous peoples” (âpihtawikosisân). Settler-descendants who offer territory acknowledgments need to think about what treaties mean and what the term “ceded territories” means (âpihtawikosisân). Territory acknowledgments are an opportunity to elevate Indigenous governance and jurisdiction (âpihtawikosisân). In addition, people need to do their own research, rather than relying on standardized institutional acknowledgments; the point is to participate in a “deeper engagement with the purpose and impact of territorial acknowledgments” (âpihtawikosisân).
Vowel suggests that territory acknowledgments are more commonplace in western Canada than elsewhere, and that they tend to be absent in rural spaces “where there is arguably the most tangible Indigenous presence” (âpihtawikosisân). “Yet these would be the spaces in which territorial acknowledgments have the potential to be most powerful; the settler rural/First Nations divide is huge and plays out in deeply problematic (and all too often violent) ways,” she writes (âpihtawikosisân). Those two solitudes “exist on lands that supply the bulk of resources extracted” to support urban areas, “meaning they also experience the effects of resource extraction in ways urban residents do not” (âpihtawikosisân). However, settler and First Nations communities are “accustomed to working in isolation” from each other, rather than being unified in response to the effects of resource extraction on the land and on local communities (âpihtawikosisân). Ignoring the First Nations presence in rural areas “is normalized, deeply ingrained, and central to rural settler governance,” Vowel states (âpihtawikosisân).
“This brings me back to the question of . . . why are people acknowledging territory in the first place?” Vowel asks:
When mostly urban institutions and circles are making these acknowledgments, who are they thinking of? Urban Indigenous populations? Rural and remote First Nations, Métis, and Inuit communities? Is there a feeling of reaching out to or desiring partnerships with these communities? What of the non-Indigenous communities also found in rural and remote spaces? Are they implicated in urban-based territorial acknowledgments, or are they as ignored by their urban counterparts as they in turn ignore local Indigenous communities? (âpihtawikosisân)
Those are excellent questions, but they need to be considered within the context of the social and political divisions between urban and rural settlers, divisions which are reflected in, to take one example, the differences in voting habits between urban settlers and their rural counterparts.
“If we think of territorial acknowledgments as sites of potential disruption, they can be transformative acts that to some extent undo Indigenous erasure,” Vowel writes:
I believe this is true as long as these acknowledgments discomfit both those speaking and hearing the words. The fact of Indigenous presence should force non-Indigenous peoples to confront their own place on these lands. I would like to see territorial acknowledgments happening in spaces where they are currently absent, particularly in rural and remote areas and within the governance structures of settlers. (âpihtawikosisân)
At the same time, “territorial acknowledgments can become stripped of their disruptive power through repetition,” she continues. “The purpose cannot merely be to inform an ignorant public that Indigenous peoples exist, and that Canada has a history of colonialism” (âpihtawikosisân). Indigenous protocols could perhaps be a guide to moving territory acknowledgments into “the space beyond the acknowledgment” (âpihtawikosisân). “Stopping at territorial acknowledgments is unacceptable,” she contends (âpihtawikosisân).
For instance, if settlers start considering themselves to be guests on Indigenous lands, then they would need to learn about their obligations as guests, according to the First Nations on whose land they are staying. “What are the Indigenous protocols involved in being a guest, what are your responsibilities?” Vowel asks. “What responsibilities do your hosts have towards you, and are you making space for those responsibilities to be exercised?” (âpihtawikosisân). “What I am saying is that all Indigenous nations have specific expectations of guests, and of hosts, and so far non-Indigenous peoples have not been very good at finding out what those are,” she continues:
I think this needs to be the next step. It requires having actual conversations with Indigenous communities, saying things like “we want to be better guests, how to we do that according to your laws and hey by the way, what ARE your laws” and being prepared to hear the answers, even those that are uncomfortable like “give us the land back.” (âpihtawikosisân)
“Moving beyond territorial acknowledgments means asking hard questions about what needs to be done once we’re ‘aware of Indigenous presence,’” she concludes. “It requires that we remain uncomfortable, and it means making concrete, disruptive change. How can you be in good relationship with Indigenous peoples, with non-human beings, with the land and water? No ideas? Well, it’s a good idea that Indigenous peoples are still here, because our legal orders address all of those questions. So why aren’t you asking us?” (âpihtawikosisân).
The questions Vowel raises in this post are important and powerful, and in ways they lead back to Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang’s demand for concrete actions beyond settler consciousness raising. But are settler-descendants ready for “concrete, disruptive change”? Are they ready to be uncomfortable, to be discomfited, to be unsettled? I’m not convinced that they are, even if that is what the situation requires, and it might be that change will happen only at a speed which allows settlers to avoid discomfort. If that’s the case, that change may never reach the kind of place where they will begin to, for instance, ask Indigenous peoples about being in a good relationship with the land and the water, and take the answers seriously. And yet, if we’re to avoid ecological catastrophe, we might need to listen to Indigenous thinking about such relationships. I’m not sure what steps one might take to encourage people to embrace discomfort. There’s a lot to think about in this post, and I’m glad I took the time to reread and take notes on Vowel’s short essay.
I wanted to read Ben Anderson’s “Preemption, Precaution, Preparedness: Anticipatory Action and Future Geographies” because I discovered that the definition of futurity that Eve Tuck and Rubén A. Gaztambide-Fernández take from Andrew Baldwin’s “Whiteness and Futurity: Towards a Research Agenda” is actually a quotation from Anderson’s essay. Baldwin’s essay is important, but if I’m going to come to a complete understanding of the idea of “futurity,” I’d better chase it back to its source. And, as it’s turned out, I did need to do this extra reading, either because I’m too dull-witted to grasp things quickly, or because others have a bad habit of not defining terms clearly.
As his title suggests, Anderson is interested in opening up “questions for research in human geography on preemption, preparedness and other forms of ‘anticipatory action’” (777). “I argue that anticipatory action matters because geographies are made and lived in the name of preempting, preparing for, or preventing threats to liberal-democratic life,” Anderson writes (777). Well, geographies would be made and lived in the name of preempting, preparing for, or preventing threats to all kinds of ways of living, but at least Anderson is making his politics clear at the outset. He notes that “[r]uined landscapes of damage and destruction” have been made in Iraq and Afghanistan in the name of “preempting the threat of terror”; that western countries have culled bird populations in order to prepare for avian flue’ and that “[a] set of mitigation policies based on global carbon trading are being rolled out as precautionary measures to combat the threat of climate change” (777). On these issues, “acting in advance of the future is an integral, yet taken-for-granted, part of liberal-democratic life,” Anderson writes. In those examples, “bombs are dropped, birds are tracked, and carbon is traded on the basis of what has not and may never happen: the future” (777).
Anderson’s question about activities based on the future is simple: how should geographers respond, “analytically, methodologically, politically,” to “the making of geographies through anticipatory action?” (777). “My starting point is that preemption, preparedness and precaution post a problem to some of human geography’s most ingrained habits and techniques of thinking,” he contends. “Anticipatory action perplexes us, or at least it should, because it invites us to think about how human geography engages with the taken-for-granted category of ‘the future.’ Common to all forms of anticipatory action is a seemingly paradoxical process whereby a future becomes cause and justification for some form of action in the here and now” (777-78). That process generates specific questions: “how is ‘the future’ being related to, how are futures known and rendered actionable to thereafter be acted upon, and what political and ethical consequences follow from acting in the present on the basis of the future?” (778). “Addressing these questions,” he continues “requires that we explicitly reconceptualize the relation between space-time and futurity” (778). However, while geographers have studied the past—and haunting, which is interesting for my research: Anderson’s bibliography may help with thinking about that phenomenon—they tend not to be directly engaged with the future. The risk of this lack of engagement with the future “is that we repeat a series of assumptions about linear temporality; specifically, that the future is a blank separate from the present or that the future is a telos towards which the present is heading” (778). “More specifically,” he continues, “to understand how anticipatory action functions we must understand the presence of the future, that is the ontological and epistemological status of ‘what has not and may never happen’” (Brian Massumi, qtd. 778). He notes the number of ways in which the future is present in the present: in futures contracts, in investments, in contracts, in clock time, in the prophecies of evangelical Christians and fortune-tellers, and in the imaginations of science-fiction writers (778).
In this paper, Anderson intends to offer “a conceptual vocabulary” to address the task of understanding how geographies are made based on anticipatory action (778). This vocabulary, he writes, “sits in the juncture between a Foucaultian analytic of how futures are now governed and the emphasis in non-representational theories on the presence of the future” (778). Futures, he continues, “are anticipated and acted on through the assembling of” three phenomena (778). These include styles, which consist of “a series of statements through which ‘the future’ as an abstract category is disclosed and related to,” statements which “condition and limit how ‘the future’ can be intervened on” and which “function through a circularity, in that statements disclose a set of relations between past, present and future and self-authenticate those relations” (778-79); practices, which “give content to specific futures, including acts of performing, calculating and imagining” and make present the future “in affects, epistemic objects and materialities” (779); and logics “through which action in the present is enacted” (779). Anderson helpfully provides a definition of the term logics (which has been in so much of what I’ve read merely a buzzword of sorts): “A logic is a programmatic way of formalizing, justifying and deploying action in the here and now. Logics involve action that aims to prevent, mitigate, adapt to, prepare for or preempt specific futures” (779). This conceptual vocabulary, Anderson writes, “enables a mode of inquiry that aims to understand the multiform presence of the future in any and all geographies. By this I mean that inquiry would attend to how futures are: disclosed and related to through statements about the future; rendered present through materialities, epistemic objects and affects; and acted on through specific policies and programmes” (779).
Next, Anderson turns to the types of anticipatory action he is interested in, which (as his introduction suggests) are related to terrorism, pandemics and biosecurity, and both “global warming and ozone depletion” (779). There are commonalities between the way these phenomena “have been enacted as threats”:
First, in comparison to systemic interruptions, ruptures and breakdowns, they are potentially catastrophic. That is, each threat may irreversible alter the conditions of life at both the microscopic and pandemic levels. Second, in each the “malicious demon” that is heralded as the source of disaster is a somewhat vague spectral presence that cannot easily be discerned. Third, in each the disaster is imminent. Not only is the present on the verge of disaster, but disaster is incubating within the present and can be discerned through “early warnings” of danger (whether through the “harbingers” of climate change or “radicalization” in anti-terror legislation). (779-80)
“Without some form of action, a threshold will be crossed and a disastrous future will come about,” Anderson continues, although because that future is “incubating within the present, life will remain tensed on the threshold of disaster even if an immediate threat is acted against,” which means that “[a]nticipatory action must . . . become a permanent part of liberal democracies if disaster is to be averted” (780). Again, I would think that other forms of government would also be concerned with forms of anticipatory action: what about the Soviet Union and its weapons stockpiles during the Cold War, or Turkey’s current incursion into Syria as a way to prevent future Kurdish political or military activity?
The problem of anticipatory action, in any case, opens up the question of how the future relates to the past and the present (780). “Every attempt to stop or mitigate a threat holds certain assumptions about ‘the future,’” Anderson writes. “It is worth recalling just a few other ways of acting on the future in order to be specific about how ‘the future’ is related to in contemporary anticipatory action” (780). These include ideas of the future as apocalypse, indefinite progress, or utopia, each of which authorizes different forms of action in the present (780). One of the characteristics of contemporary anticipatory action, Anderson continues, is “the assumption . . . that the future will diverge from the past and present. It is neither a perpetuation of the present, nor an imminent-transcendent End outside of time. Instead, the future will radically differ from the here and now” (780). “On the one hand, the future will be uncertain in the sense that it will exceed present knowlege (or the capability to generate knowledge,” Anderson writes. “On the other hand, the future will be indeterminate in that perfect knowledge is impossible. The future is the realm of troubling and unforeseen novelty. It will be qualitatively different from the past and present and may bring forth bad surprises” (780). Acting in conditions of indeterminacy is not a new problem, but, Anderson writes “anticipatory action is now imbricated with the plurality of power relations that make up contemporary liberal democracies,” which means, for him, “that any type of anticipatory action will only provide relief, or promise to provide relief, to a valued life, not necessarily all of life. Certain lives may have to be abandoned, damaged or destroyed in order to protect, save or care for life” (780).
In addition, “the proliferation of anticipatory action, and the emphasis on an open future, is inseparable from a spatial-temporal imaginary of life as contingency. Three elements in this imaginary are particularly important” (780-81). The first is the idea that “the life threatened is understood in terms of its irreducible complexity, complexity being a function of a globalized world of transnational flows and connections” (781). Terrorism, pandemics, and climate change have all been understood through “the problem of the relation between ‘good’ and ‘bad’ circulations and connections” in this network (781). Therefore, “[t]he future is open, first, because threats emerge from a complex world of flows and connections” (781). Second, “the problem is the heterogenesis of the bad within the good. The future is open for a second reason: life is imagined as unpredictable, dynamic and non-linear. Change cannot be understood as the linear outcome of past conditions or present trends” (781). For terrorism, pandemics, and climate change, “events are themselves complex, singular, occurrences that are not necessarily temporally bound by a start, middle and end, or spatially bound in a given national territory” (781). For that reason, it is important “to act on catastrophic processes as or before they incubate, and certainly before they cross a threshold to become catastrophic events” (781). In addition, because “the causes of disaster are presumed to incubate within life,” they are not “mysterious, external, acts of God visited upon that life” (781). It is hard to care for life by anticipating disasters, however, when the causes of those disasters are difficult to identify (781). Third, “events are ‘de-bounding,’” a term which means “that their effects are not necessarily localized spatially or temporally” and will “extend in non-linear ways across space-times” (781). “[D]isasters are themselves emergent phenomena,” Anderson states, by which he means that “the effects or impacts of disaster change as they circulate” (781).
Anderson suggests that it might be possible to identify the causes of this equation between life and contingency, but what he wants to emphasize “is more modest: anticipatory action has emerged in a situation where it is precisely the contingency of life that is the occasion of threat and opportunity, danger and profit. Preemption, preparedness and precaution are, therefore, caught in the productive/destructive relation with uncertainty that characterizes liberalism” (782). He cites Foucault on this point, suggesting that:
On the one hand, life must be constantly secured in relation to the dangers tha tlurk within it and loom over it. Life is tensed on verge of a catastrophe that may emerge in unexpected and unanticipated ways. On the other hand, the securing of life must not be antithetical to the positive development of a creative relation with uncertainty. Liberal life must be open to the unanticipated if freedoms of commerce and self-fashioning individuals are to be enabled. Uncertainty is both threat and promise: both that which must be secured against and that which must be enabled. (782)
Anderson is drawing on recently published lectures Foucault gave at the Collège de France, and since I haven’t read that material, I can’t comment on his interpretation of it. However, his insistence on the connection between anticipatory action and liberal democracy clearly comes from those lectures. “In this context the pragmatic question for anticipatory action becomes: how to act in a way that protects and enhances some forms of valued life?” he continues. “The response has been to govern and secure on the basis of possible or potential futures that threaten some form of disruption to an existing social-spatial order” (782). In other words, anticipatory action “aims to ensure that no bad surprises happen,” and therefore “the here and now is continuously assayed for the futures that may be incubating within it and emerge out of it” (782). Citing Hacking, Anderson suggests that two links between “uncertainty and liberal rule are well known: first, styles of foresight based on good judgement as a means of acting against Fortuna; second, probabilistic prediction based on induction from the past distribution of events” (782). Those two styles of foresight are “in the midst of being supplemented by a third” through “the proliferation of possibilities about the occurrence and effects of events, alongside an attention to improbably but high-impact events” (782). Well, climate change (as we are learning very quickly) is not improbable, although terror attacks and pandemics might be. In any case, Anderson suggests that the indeterminism characteristic of this new style of foresight “is not only epistemic—that is, based on a restriction of knowledge that could in principle be overcome” but rather “an irreducible fact about a ‘pluri-potential’ world of complex interdependencies, circulations and events” (782). For Anderson, the best term for this emerging style is “premeditation”: it “names a set of statements that disclose and relate to ‘the future’ as a surprise” (782). Those statements shape how the future can be acted upon in two ways. First, “disclosing the future as a surprise means that one cannot then predetermine the form of the future by offering a deterministic prediction”; rather, “the future as surprise can only be rendered actionable by knowing a range of possible futures that may happen, including those that are improbable” (782). Second, “statements about the future as a surprise do not enable the future to be grasped and handled through a process of induction from the past distribution of events,” and instead “anticipatory action must be based on a constant readiness to identify another possible way in which a radically different future may play out” (782). Premeditation emphasizes knowing the future directly “because there could always be another radically different way in which events could evolve” (782-83). For Anderson, “[s]tatements about ‘the future’ as a surprise underpin preemption, preparedness and other forms of contemporary anticipatory action” (783).
Next, Anderson turns to the ways that contemporary anticipatory action understands life as contingency. “To act before the disaster takes place, futures must somehow be known and made present,” he writes. “But relating to the future as a surprise that may being forth unforeseen novelty rather than, say, a perpetuation of the present, might initially seem to lead to an impasse”: how can one “render futures actionable when the future cannot be known through the past frequency and severity of events?” (783). To address that question, “a range of practices have been invented, formalized and deployed for knowing futures and therefore attempting to ensure that there are no ‘bad surprises’” (783). These include “the ubiquitous calculations that form a constant background to life” through such techniques as “threat-prints, data mining, impact assessments, trend analysis, and complexity modelling of various forms” (783-84). He hasn’t included algorithms, but perhaps because social media was less important when this article was published, the reliance of big corporations on the predictive power of algorithms was less understood. These diverse techniques, he continues, are about measuring the world, he writes, “by which I mean that statements about the indeterminacy of the future are combined with non-linear, or stochastic, calculations of relations, associations or links,” which make specific futures present through numbers, represented as charts, tables, or graphs (784). The insurance industry relies on such calculations to make the future actionable. Predicting various (and typically catastrophic, in Anderson’s argument) futures through such calculations, “a ‘bond of uniformity’ is imposed on the catastrophic event by drawing together a set of effects that vary spatially and temporally,” and “the future event is disentangled by sorting out and ranking the effects” of its different elements (784).
Second, while “[c]alculation, whether through CAT models or other techniques, renders complex future geographies actionable through the numericalization of a reality to come—numbers that may thereafter circulate, be reflected on and take an affective charge,” another “way of making futures present is through practices based on acts of creative fabulation, including techniques such as visioning, future-basing, link analysis and scenario planning” (784-85). These techniques enable future events to be imagined as if they were real (785). Their outcomes “differ from forms of mechanical objectivity; they range from forms of visualization (such as images, symbols and metaphors) to forms of narrativization (such as stories). Making the future present becomes a question of creating affectively imbued representations that move and mobilize” (785). Such practices “make the future present in ways that are quite different from calculation” by using scenarios, case studies, and pictures rather than graphs and charts (785). They make the future actionable “through two effects” (785). First, “a horizon of expectation is created that is composed of a set of hypothetical possibilities that the scenarios refer to. The scenarios organize and categorize while affirming the openness of the future” (785). Second, “the scenarios evoke without predicting the suspension, and disruption, of life that may follow climate change,” to use one of Anderson’s examples (785).
Finally, “[f]utures are also made present through practices that stage an interval between the here and now and a specific future through some form of acting, role play, gaming or pretending” (786). The inclusion of “pretending” in this technique suggests its connections to imagining, but they “use the creative capacities of embodiment more explicitly” (786). Various kinds of performance, including exercises, war games, and simulations, can generate knowledge of a future event even when historical evidence is absent (786). “Here the future is made present and rendered actionable in a third way: ‘as if’ futures are created through the ‘anticipatory experience’ generated through both the acts of performance or play and the material organization of particular stages or sites,” Anderson writes (786). These three “modes of practice,” he continues, “enable specific futures to be made present while remaining absent, whether through a graph of future losses, a story of a journey or a feeling of shock” (786-87).
Anderson now turns to logics. “Styles and practices enable open futures to be rendered actionable,” he writes. “They are, therefore, a necessary component of anticipatory action” (787-88). But such action requires a logic: “a coherent way in which intervention in the here and now on the basis of the future is legitimized, guided and enacted” (788). He focuses on three of these logics—precaution, preemption, and preparedness—although he notes there are others. “The goal of each is to care for a valued life by neutralizing threats to that life,” he writes. (788). Critical engagement with these logics “must turn on questions of what life is to be protected or saved, by whom, and with what effects. And, conversely, what life has been abandoned or destroyed, by whom, and with what effects” (788).
Precaution, he continues, “is perhaps the best known of the three logics, as it is formalized in the ‘precautionary principle,’” which emerged in European environmental law in the 1970s. Precaution, he writes, “can be understood as a preventative logic with two characteristics (788-89)”:
First, preventative action is separate from the processes it acts on. The object of precaution could develop a catastrophic outcome if the precautionary was was not to take place. Precaution begins once a determinate threat has been identified, even if that threat is scientifically uncertain. Second, precautionary logics act before the identified threat reaches a point of irreversibility. The key question thereafter concerns proportionality: is the response in proportion to the scope of the threat? There is a need, therefore, to constantly assess the balance between what the threat could become and the costs of (in)action in the present. (789)
Climate change is where calls for precautionary action have emerged: “Urgent action is called for because of, rather than despite, the uncertainty of the links between emission scenarios, temperature changes and impacts” (789). Today, of course, such expressions of uncertainty appear rather quaint, given the increasing effects of climate change on our world, but this essay was published 10 years ago, and perhaps the situation seemed more uncertain back then.
Preemption, Anderson’s second logic, is similar to precaution: both emphasize “action under conditions of uncertainty about a future event, a focus on emergent threat inaworld of interdependencies and circulations, and a generative role given to collective apprehension” (789-90). Their shared emphasis on “potential or actual threat means that both break with the logic of risk . . . as ‘calculable uncertainty’ based on the induction of frequency and harm from the past distribution of events” (790). Despite those similarities, there is “a difference in how each intervenes in life”: while precaution focuses on “the stopping or halting of something before it reaches a point of irreversibility,” preemption “acts over threats that have not yet emerged as determinate threats, and so does not only halt or stop from a position outside” but is “incitatory and . . . is justified on the basis of indeterminate potentiality” (790). Anderson’s example of preemption is the preemptive wars waged by the United States in Iraq and Afghanistan since 9/11 (790). “In comparison with the emphasis on continuity that we find in precaution, preemption unashamedly makes and reshapes life,” he suggests, causing a range of unintended effects (790). Those effects are not mistakes, “because in a preemptive logic inaction is not an option so unintended effects are unavoidable”; in fact, “preemption is indifferent to those generative effects” because “the proliferating effects of preemption may generate something else: opportunities to be seized” (790). “Unlike precaution, which aims to preserve a valued life through prevention, preemptive logics work by proliferating effects and creating life, albeit in the case of the ‘war on terror’ lives that have been abandoned and dispossessed,” Anderson writes (790), a statement that is unfortunately confusing because (I think) the theoretical language demands that it be so.
Finally, Anderson turns to preparedness. “If preemption and precaution are based on action that aims to prevent the occurrence of a future,” preparedness “prepares for the aftermath of events” (790-91). It shares, with preemption and precaution, the same problem: “how to act on indeterminate/uncertain futures emergent form a complex set of flows and connections” (791). Preparedness responds differently, however: “Its sphere of operation is a series of events after a precipitating event” (791). Rather than trying to stop an event from happening, it “aims to stop the effects of an event disrupting the circulations and interdependencies that make up a valued life” (791). Preparedness is about building resiliency (in infrastructure, for instance) “as a way of preparing for the occurrence of unpredictable events” (791).
For Anderson, “[p]recaution, preemption and preparedness are all means of guiding action once the future has been problematized in a certain way—as a disruptive surprise—and each are deployed once specific futures have been made present through practices of calculation, performance or imagination” (791). They do something else as well: they redistribute “the relationship that lives within and outside liberal democracies have to disaster. To protect, save and care for certain forms of life is to potentially abandon, dispossess and destroy others” (791). This leads Anderson to a series of questions: “First, how are different forms of anticipatory action imbricated with sovereign actions, such as violent interventions, or the implantation of emergency measures?” (792). Second, “what form of life is valorized now and in the future?” (792). Third, “how is conduct conducted in relation to different types of anticipatory action, and the specific networks of governance through which precaution, preemption and preparedness are deployed?” (792). Answering such questions “demands detailed empirical work sensitive to the operation of anticipatory logics in relation to plural relations of power” (792). He suggests that “[a] logic does not have a primary actor, primary target or characteristic spatial form”; in a logic, those are simply contextual (792). Determining those contexts is clearly something Anderson thinks human geographers ought to be doing.
Finally, Anderson reaches his conclusion on the relationships between space and futurity—in other words, between geography as a discipline and futurity as he has been discussing it. What implications does a study of the styles, practices, and logics of anticipatory action have for human geography? “First, work could attend to the presence of the future in any and all geographies,” he writes (793). Second, “we should reflect on the assumptions about the future that are embedded in our extant habits and techniques of thinking” (793). First, “work could supplement how futures are made present by anticipating other desired futures through a range of utopic sensibilities, skills and techniques,” he suggests (793). Second, “word could aim to scramble attempts to create desired futures by welcoming the unanticipated and thereafter cultivating the irruption of virtual or to-come futures” (794). Experimenting with our relations to the future “is necessary because to fold alternative futures into the here and now is to open up the chance of new possibilities; just as recovering overlooked pasts has long been recognized as a means of disclosing new and different future geographies” (794).
I didn’t read this article because I’m interested in future research directions for human geography. I decided to read it because Eve Tuck and Rubén A. Gaztambide-Fernández cite quotations from it (through Andrew Baldwin) as the source for their use of the term “futurity” in the phrase “settler futurity” (80). They note that futurity suggests the ways in which the future is rendered knowable—or at least imaginable—through the anticipatory logics of precaution, preemption and preparedness (80). Their point is “to emphasize the ways in which replacement is entirely concerned with settler futurity, which always indivisibly means the continued and complete eradication of the original inhabitants of contested land” (80). Therefore, for Tuck and Gaztambide-Fernández, as well as Tuck and K. Wayne Yang, settler futurity seems to be a synonym for the genocidal process that Patrick Wolfe describes as a logic of elimination, or the replacement of Indigenous peoples by Settlers. No wonder Tuck and Yang suggest that settler futurity is a bad thing. They describe incommensurability as “an acknowledgement that decolonization will require a change in the order of the world” (31), and suggest that “[t]o fully enact an ethic of incommensurability”—an ethic that is, they argue, central to decolonization—“means relinquishing settler futurity, abandoning the hope that settlers may one day be commensurable to Native peoples” (36). Commensurable, according to the O.E.D., means “measurable by the same standard or scale of values,” or “[p]roportionable in measure, size, amount, etc.; having a suitable proportion, proportionate to.” For Tuck and Yang, then, Settlers cannot be measured by the same standard or scale of values, because their futurity is based on the genocidal fantasy, or ambition, or replacing Indigenous peoples through the logic of elimination, whereas the futurity of Indigenous peoples is based on a resistance to the logic of elimination. Settler futurity, in this context, is thus a synonym for replacement or the logic of elimination. Perhaps I should’ve figured that out without having to read Anderson or Baldwin, or perhaps Tuck and Yang, or Tuck and Gaztambide-Fernández, could have defined that term more clearly. At least I now know what they’re talking about. I’ll take that as a victory. But I think that if I’m ever tempted to use the term “settler futurity,” I’ll refer to Wolfe’s logic of elimination instead. It just seems simpler and clearer.
Works Cited
Anderson, Ben. “Preemption, Precaution, Preparedness: Anticipatory Action and Future Geographies.” Progress in Human Geography, vol. 34, no. 6, 2010, pp. 777-98.
Baldwin, Andrew. “Whiteness and Futurity: Towards a Research Agenda.” Progress in Human Geography, vol. 36, no. 2, 2012, pp. 172-87.
Tuck, Eve, and Rubén A. Gaztambide-Fernández. “Curriculum, Replacement, and Settler Futurity.” Journal of Curriculum Theorizing, vol. 29, no. 1, 2013, pp. 72-89.
Tuck, Eve, and K. Wayne Yang. “Decolonization Is Not a Metaphor.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, vol. 1, no. 1, 2012, pp. 1-40.
Wolfe, Patrick. “Settler Colonialism and the Elimination of the Native.” Journal of Genocide Research, vol. 8, no. 4, 2006, pp. 387-409.
Albert Memmi’s 1957 book Portrait du Colonisé précedé du Portrait du Colonisateur was first published in an English edition in 1965. Memmi was Tunisian, and since Tunisia was then a French colony, although one engaged in a struggle for liberation, he was one of the colonized. “I discovered that few aspects of my life and my personality were untouched by this fact,” he writes of being colonized in the book’s preface. “Not only my own thoughts, my passions and my conduct, but also the conduct of others towards me was affected” (viii). For this reason, he continues, “I undertook this inventory of conditions of colonized people mainly in order to understand myself and to identify my place in the society of other men. It was my readers—not all of them Tunisian—who later convinced me that this portrait was equally theirs” (viii). What Memmi was writing about “was the fate of a vast multitude across the world” (viii-ix). But The Colonizer and the Colonized goes beyond a description of colonized people:
The colonial relationship which I had tried to define chained the colonizer and the colonized into an implacable dependence, molded their respective characters and dictated their conduct. Just as there was an obvious logic in the reciprocal behavior of the two colonial partners, another mechanism, proceeding from the first, would lead, I believed, inexorably to the decomposition of this dependence. (ix)
It’s clear how Memmi could write about the colonized, since he would be drawing from his experience, but how could he understand the colonizer? “I know the colonizer from the inside almost as well as I know the colonized,” he writes (xiii), noting that even though he was Tunisian, he was Jewish, not Muslim, and the Jewish community in Tunisia “passionately endeavoured to identify themselves with the French,” thereby gaining some minor, “laughable” privileges (xiv). “The Jewish population identified as much with the colonizers as with the colonized,” he writes, and because of this ambivalence, he understood “the contradictory emotions which swayed their lives” (xiv). “All of this explains why the portrait of the colonizer was in part my own—projected in a geometric sense,” he continues (xv).
So Memmi’s book describes the colonized, but it is also a description of the colonizer, of the relationship between colonizer and colonized, and the process of decolonization; and Memmi relies on his own experience as a colonized person as the source of his understanding of these. Indeed, writing this book helped him to understand his experience. “The sum of events which I had lived since childhood, often incoherent and contradictory on the surface, began to fall into dynamic patterns,” he writes (x):
I needed to put some sort of order into the chaos of my feelings and to form a basis for my future actions. By temperament and education I had to do this in a disciplined manner, following the consequences as far as possible. If I had not gone all the way, trying to find coherence in all these diverse facts, reconstructing them into portraits which were answerable to one another, I could not have convinced myself and would have remained dissatisfied with my effort. I saw, then, what help to fighting men the simple, ordered description of their misery and humiliation could be. I saw how explosive the objective relation to the colonized and colonizer of an essentially explosive condition could be. (x)
As I read these words, I wondered if after 60 years Memmi’s insights still have value, and if they might be applied to settler colonialism as it exists in Canada. The answer: yes, I think they can.
In his introduction to the book, published in the 1957 edition, Jean-Paul Sartre writes that it “establishes some strong truths”:
First of all, that there are neither good nor bad colonists: there are colonialists. Among these, some reject their objective reality. Borne along by the colonialist apparatus, they do everyday in reality what they condemn in fantasy, for all their actions contribute to the maintenance of oppression. They will change nothing and will serve no one, but will succeed only in finding moral comfort in malaise. (xxv-xxvi)
Doesn’t that describe those of us who reject the premises of settler colonialism but are nonetheless caught in the position of colonizer? Those colonizers, Sartre continues, deny “the title of humanity” to the colonized, which isn’t difficult, “for the system deprives them”—that is, the colonized—“of everything” (xvi):
Thus oppression justifies itself through oppression: the oppressors produce and maintain by force the evils that render the oppressed, in their eyes, more and more what they would have to be like to deserve their fate. The colonizer can only exonerate himself in the systematic pursuit of the “dehumanization” of the colonized by identifying himself a little more each day with the colonialist apparatus. Terror and exploitation dehumanize, and the exploiter authorizes himself with that dehumanization to carry his exploitation further. The engine of colonialism turns in a circle; it is impossible to distinguish between its praxis and objective necessity. (xvi-xvii)
Thus, at some level, Canadians must not think that First Nations deserve clean drinking water, to take one egregious example, because they don’t already have clean drinking water. They must think that First Nations children deserve to be apprehended by social services at astonishing rates, because they can be apprehended by social services. At the end of his introduction, Sartre suggests that the colonizer regards the humanity in others “everywhere as his enemy. To handle this, the colonizer must assume the opaque rigidity and imperviousness of stone. In short, he must dehumanize himself, as well” (xxviii). Doesn’t that describe our federal government’s continuing behaviour towards First Nations, despite its fine words about reconciliation? Hasn’t it become dehumanized by denying the humanity of others? “A relentless reciprocity binds the colonizer to the colonized—his product and his fate,” Sartre continues, and yet colonialism contains within itself the seeds of its own destruction, because “[t]he excluded human beings will affirm their exclusivity in national selfhood. Colonialism creates the patriotism of the colonized” (xxviii). These are some of the insights Sartre has gleaned from his reading of Memmi’s work. But what have I learned from it?
Memmi begins the book’s first part, “Portrait of the Colonizer,” in the book’s first chapter, “Does the colonial exist?,” with the mythical image of this creature as “laboring selflessly for mankind, attending the sick, and spreading culture to the nonliterate,” a pose of “a noble adventurer” or “a righteous pioneer” (3). That image is belied by the economic motives of colonization, he continues: “The cultural and moral mission of a colonizer, even in the beginning, is no longer tenable” (3). Why do Europeans move to colonies? The reason, Memmi suggests, is simple: the colony is “a place where one earns more and spends less” (4). “You go to a colony because jobs are guaranteed, wages high, careers more rapid and business more profitable,” he suggests (4). Yet, despite finding life in the colony profitable, Memmi continues, “the colonizer has nevertheless not yet become aware of the historic role which will be his. He is lacking one step in understanding his new status; he must also understand the origin and significance of this profit” (7). That understanding is not long in coming: “For how long could he fail to see the misery of the colonized and the relation of that misery to his own comfort? He realizes that this easy profit is so great only because it is wrested from others. In short, he finds two things in one: he discovers the existence of the colonizer as he discovers his own privilege” (7). Thus the European living in the colony
finds himself on one side of a scale, the other side of which bears the colonized man. If his living standards are high, it is because those of the colonized are low; if he can benefit from plentiful and undemanding labor and servants, it is because the colonized can be exploited at will and are not protected by the laws of the colony; if he can easily obtain administrative positions, it is because they are reserved for him and the colonized are excluded from them; the more freely he breathes, the more the colonized are choked. (8)
It is impossible, Memmi continues, for the colonial “not to be aware of the constant illegitimacy of his status,” a “double illegitimacy,” since by coming to the colony, “he has succeeded not merely in creating a place for himself but also in taking away that of the inhabitant, granting himself astounding privileges to the detriment of those rightfully entitled to them” (9). The colonized, of course, recognize this fact, but Memmi argues that the colonizer does as well: “he knows, in his own eyes as well as those of his victim, that he is a usurper. He must adjust to both being regarded as such, and to this situation” (9).
Memmi now sets out “a convenient terminology” which distinguishes between “a colonial, a colonizer and the colonialist” (10). A colonial, he suggests, “is a European living in a colony but having no privileges, whose living conditions are not higher than those of a colonized person of equivalent economic and social status” (10). However, such a creature “does not exist, for all Europeans in the colonies are privileged” (10). Such privilege is relative, he continues: “To different degrees every colonizer is privileged, at least comparatively so, ultimately to the detriment of the colonized” (11). All Europeans in the colony are thus colonizers or colonialists. The courts will be more lenient on the colonizer than the colonized; it will be easier for the colonizer to get help from the government; jobs will be more available. “Can he be so blind or so blinded that he can never see that, given equal material circumstances, economic class or capabilities, he always receives preferential treatment?” Memmi asks. “How could he help looking back from time to time to see all the colonized, sometimes former schoolmates or colleagues, whom he has so greatly outpaced?” (12). The colonizer “need only show his face to be prejudged favorably by those in the colony who count” (12).
Other groups in the colony—“those who are neither colonizers nor colonized,” such as (in Tunisia) Jews, Maltese, Corsicans, Italians—are “candidates for assimilation” or “the recently assimilated,” will receive “small crumbs” of privilege which “contribute toward differentiating them—substantially separating them from the colonized” (13). “To whatever extent favored as compared to the colonized masses, they tend to establish relationships of the colonizer-colonized nature,” Memmi argues. “At the same time, not corresponding to the colonizing group, not having the same role as theirs in colonial society, they each stand out in their own way” (13-14). The Jews in Tunisia, for instance, despite “their enthusiastic adoption of Western language, culture and customs,” are not permitted to develop a resemblance to the colonizer “in the frank hope that he may cease to consider them different from him” (15). “Thus they live in painful and constant ambiguity,” Memmi writes. “Rejected by the colonizer, they share in part the physical conditions of the colonized and have a communion of interests with him; on the other hand, they reject the values of the colonized as belonging to a decayed world from which they eventually hope to escape” (15-16). Memmi might be describing the situation of newcomers to Canada—particularly people of colour—with these words.
Memmi concludes this first chapter on the colonizer with a series of “fundamental questions”:
Once he has discovered the import of colonization and is conscious of his own position (that of the colonized and their necessary relationship), is he going to accept them? Will he agree to be a privileged man, and to underscore the distress of the colonized? Will he be a usurper and affirm the oppression and injustice to the true inhabitant of the colony? Will he accept being a colonizer under the growing habit of privilege and illegitimacy, under the constant gaze of the usurped? Will he adjust to this position and his inevitable self-censure? (18)
The next chapter, “The colonizer who refuses,” addresses the possibility that colonizers will not accept colonization (19). If a new arrival to the colony vows not to accept colonization, Memmi argues, that vow, that sense of indignation, “is not always accompanied by desire for a policy of action. It is rather a position of principle. He may openly protest, or sign a petition, or join a group which is not automatically hostile toward the colonized. This already suffices for him to recognize that he has changed difficulties and discomfort” (20).
Why are the refusing colonizer’s actions merely symbolic? Memmi has the answer: “It is not easy to escape mentally from a concrete situation, to refuse its ideology while continuing to live with its actual relationships. From now on, he lives his life under the sign of a contradiction which looms at every step, depriving him of all coherence and all tranquility” (20). What this colonizer renounces “is part of himself, and what he slowly becomes as soon as he accepts a life in a colony. He participates in and benefits from those privileges which he half-heartedly denounces” (20). If this colonizer continues to object to colonialism, “he will learn that he is launching into an undeclared conflict with his own people which will always remain alive, unless he returns to the colonialist fold or is defeated” (21). His fellow colonizers will see this person as “nothing but a traitor. He challenges their very existence and endangers the very homeland which they represent in the colony” (21). The colonizer who refuses must either submit to the demands of “the colonial community” or leave, Memmi suggests (22), although he notes that there is one other option: to “adopt the colonized people and be adopted by them,” to “become a turncoat” (22). But this is a problem: “To refuse colonization is one thing; to adopt the colonized and be adopted by them seems to be another; and the two are far from being connected,” Memmi writes (22-23). “To succeed in this second conversion, our man would have to be a moral hero,” he continues (23). The impossibility of this conversion seems to block Memmi. “But let us drop this,” he writes, noting that one can be, “while awaiting the revolution, both a revolutionary and an exploiter”:
He discovers that if the colonized have justice on their side, if he can go so far as to give them his approval and even his assistance, his solidarity stops here; he is not one of them and has no desire to be one. He vaguely foresees the day of their liberation and the reconquest of their rights, but does not seriously plan to share their existence, even if they are freed. (23)
Racism is part of the reason for the impossibility of doing more than this, which does not surprise Memmi at all: “Who can completely rid himself of bigotry in a country where everyone is tainted by it, including its victims?” (23). But in fact the refusing colonizer simply realizes that, while “the colonized have suddenly become living and suffering humanity” and “the colonizer refuses to participate in their suppression and decides to come to their assistance,” at the same time “he has another civilization before him, customs differing from his own, men whose reactions often surprise him, with whom he does not feel deep affinity” (24). And, one might add, there’s no guarantee that the colonized want to accept this person into their community. There may be no way to cross the cultural, social, and linguistic barriers between them.
“I am quite willing to admit that excessive romanticizing of the difference”—that is, the differences between European colonizers and North African colonized—“must be avoided,” Memmi writes. “It may be thought that the benevolent colonizer’s difficulties in adapting are not very important. The essential factor is firmness of ideological attitude and condemnation of colonization” (27). If the “benevolent colonizer has succeeded in laying aside both the problem of his own privileges and that of his emotional difficulties,” Memmi continues, “[o]nly his ideological and political attitudes remain to be considered” (27). That will involve tackling the question of nationalism—difficult for socialists, with their “internationalist bent” (28). “For a number of historical, sociological and psychological reasons, the struggle for liberation by colonized peoples has taken on a marked national and nationalistic look,” Memmi points out, which is a problem for “the European left,” which “suffers from very intense doubts and real uneasiness in the face of the nationalistic form of those attempts at liberation” (29). This doubt and uneasiness “is distinctly aggravated in a left-wing colonizer, i.e., a leftist living in a colony and living his daily life within that nationalism” (30). Such a person will be uncomfortable with terrorism and political assassination, which are tools in the struggle of the colonized for freedom (30). The refusing colonizer will also worry about what will happen after liberation, whether “the liberated nation” will aspire “to be religious,” or to show “no concern for individual freedom” (32). “Again there is no way out except to assume a hidden, bolder, and nobler motive,” Memmi writes: to believe that “all the lucid and responsible fighters are anything but theocrats; they really love and venerate freedom” (32). Yet, “proclamations in the name of God” and “the Holy War concept” will throw “the leftist off balance” and, “fearing that he might be wrong again, he will retreat; he will speculate on a more distant future,” in which “the colonized will rid themselves of xenophobia and racist temptation” (33-34). So, while “every true leftist must support the national aspirations of people,” it may be that, “in fact, he is perhaps aiding the birth of a social order in which there is no room for a leftist as such”” no room for “political democracy and freedom, economic democracy and justice, rejection of racist xenophobia and universality, material and spiritual progress,” in other words (34). “These very difficulties, this hesitation which curiously resembles remorse, excludes him all the more,” Memmi continues. “They leave him suspect not only in the eyes of the colonized, but also in those of the left wing at home; it is from this that he suffers most” (35).
All of these anxieties stand in the way of the rejecting colonizer’s adoption by the colonized. But Memmi also points out that, “[t]o succeed in becoming a turncoat, as he has finally resolved to do, it is not enough to accept the position of the colonized, it is necessary to be loved by them” (37). This second point is just as difficult as the first:
In order truly to become a part of the colonial struggle, even all his good will is not sufficient; there must still be the possibility of adoption by the colonized. However, he suspects that he will have no place in the future nation. This will be the last discovery, the most staggering one for the left-wing colonizer, the one which he often makes on the eve of the liberation, though it was really predictable from the very beginning. (38)
After all, “the colonial situation is based on the relationship between one group of people and another,” with the “leftist colonizer” remaining “part of the oppressing group” and “forced to share its destiny, as he shared its good fortune” (38). “If his own kind, the colonizers, should one day be chased out of the colony, the colonized would probably not make any exception for him,” Memmi notes. “If he could continue to live in the midst of the colonized, as a tolerated foreigner, he would tolerate together with the former colonizers the rancor of a people once bullied by them” (38). “To tell the truth,” Memmi continues,
the style of a colonization does not depend upon one or a few generous or clear-thinking individuals. Colonial relations do not stem from individual good will or actions; they exist before his arrival or his birth, and whether he accepts or rejects them matters little. It is they, on the contrary which, like any institution, determine a priori his place and that of the colonized and, in the final analysis, their true relationship. . . . Being oppressed as a group, the colonized must necessarily adopt a national and ethnic form of liberation from which he cannot but be excluded. (38-39)
There appears to be no way for the refusing colonizer to remain in the colony after its liberation. “Through a de facto contradiction which he either does not see in himself or refuses to see, he hopes to continue being a European by divine right in a country which would no longer be Europe’s chattel; but this time by the divine right of love and renewed confidence,” Memmi writes (40). But, with the end of colonization will come “the overthrow of his situation and himself” (40).
“One now understands a dangerously deceptive trait of the leftist colonizer, his political ineffectiveness,” Memmi writes:
It results from the nature of his position in the colony. His demands, compared to those of the colonized, or even of a right-wing colonizer, are not solid. Besides, has one ever seen a serious political demand—one which is not a delusion or fantasy—which does not rest upon concrete solid supports, whether it be the masses or power, money or force? (41)
The colonizers know what they want, as do the colonized, but the colonist who refuses is part of neither group. “Politically, who is he? Is he not an expression of himself, of a negligible force in the varied conflicts within colonialism?” Memmi asks (41). “The difference between his commitment and that of the colonized will have unforeseen and insurmountable consequences,” Memmi answers:
Despite his attempts to take part in the politics of the colony, he will be constantly out of step in his language and in his actions. He might hesitate or reject a demand of the colonized, the significance of which he will not immediately grasp. This lack of perception will seem to confirm his indifference. Wanting to vie with the less realistic nationalists, he might indulge in an extreme type of demagogy which will increase the distrust of the colonized. When explaining the acts of the colonizer, he will offer obscure or Machiavellian rationalizations where the simple mechanics of colonization are self-explanatory. Or, to the irritated astonishment of the colonized, he will loudly excuse what the latter condemn in himself. Thus, while refusing the sinister, the benevolent colonizer can never attain the good, for his only choice is not between good and evil, but between evil and uneasiness. (42-43).
The colonizer who refuses is bound to fail, Memmi states: “everything confirms his solitude, bewilderment and ineffectiveness. He will slowly realize that the only thing to do is to remain silent” (43). “If he cannot stand this silence and make his life a perpetual compromise, he can end up by leaving the colony and its privileges,” Memmi concludes (43). Memmi’s argument is like looking into a disturbing mirror, one that reveals the impossibility of rejecting settler colonialism while remaining, by birth and citizenship, a descendant of settlers. And yet, so many Canadians are in the same place: they reject our country’s continuing colonialism, but see no effective ways to put that rejection into practice. We end up engaging in symbolic acts; these might be valuable, but they aren’t tangibly contributing to the goal of decolonization, which Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang describe as “the repatriation of land” to Indigenous peoples (7). That’s perhaps because we don’t know how to effect such a repatriation, what it would look like, or what it might cost.
The next chapter, “The colonizer who accepts,” begins by acknowledging that “it is more convenient to accept colonization and to travel the whole length of the road leading from colonial to colonialist” (45). A colonialist, in Memmi’s definition, is “only a colonizer who agrees to be a colonizer. By making his position explicit, he seeks to legitimize colonization” (45). “This is a more logical attitude, materially more coherent than the tormented dance of the colonizer who refuses and continues to live in a colony,” Memmi writes. “The colonizer who accepts his role tries in vain to adjust his life to his ideology. The colonizer who refuses, tries in vain to adjust his ideology to his life, thereby unifying and justifying his conduct. On the whole, to be a colonialist is the natural vocation of a colonizer” (45). Because the most talented colonizers will tend to leave the colony for the metropole, either to pursue opportunities or for ethical reasons, only the mediocre remain (48). “It is the mediocre citizens who set the general tone of the colony,” Memmi contends, suggesting that “it is the mediocre who are most in need of compensation and of colonial life” (48). “It is between them and the colonized that the most typical colonial relationships are created,” he continues:
Accepting his role as colonizer, the colonialist accepts the blame implied by that role. This decision in no way brings him permanent peace of mind. On the contrary, the effort he will make to overcome the confusion of his role will give us one of the keys to understanding his ambiguous position. Human relationship in the colony would perhaps have been better if the colonialist had been convinced of his legitimacy. In effect, the problem before the colonizer who accepts is the same as that before the one who refuses. Only their solutions are different; the colonizer who accepts inevitably becomes a colonialist. (51-52)
The related features that spring from this acceptance form what Memmi calls “The Usurper’s Role (or, the Nero complex)” (52). In this role (or complex), the colonialist,
at the very time of his triumph . . . admits that what triumphs in him is an image which he condemns. His true victory will therefore never be upon him: now he need only record it in the laws and morals. For this he would have to convince the others, if not himself. In other words, to possess victory completely he needs to absolve himself of it and the conditions under which it was attained. This explains his strenuous insistence, strange for a victor, on apparently futile matters. He endeavors to falsify history, he rewrites laws, he would extinguish memories—anything to succeed in transforming his usurpation into legitimacy. (52)
This bad conscience expresses itself in other ways: “the more the usurped is downtrodden, the more the usurper triumphs and, thereafter, confirms his guilt and establishes his self-condemnation. Thus, the momentum of this mechanism for defence propels itself and worsens as it continues to move” (53). The colonialist will even “wish the disappearance of the usurped,” as Patrick Wolfe (among others) has noted (53). As the colonialist engages in heavier oppression, he become an oppressor. “Nero, the typical model of a usurper, is thus brought to persecute Britannicus savagely and to pursue him,” Memmi states. “But the more he hurts him, the more he coincides with the atrocious role he has chosen for himself. The more he sinks into injustice, the more he hates Britannicus. He seeks to injure the victim who turns Nero into a tyrant” (53).Memmi’s argument here suggests something I’ve often wondered about: whether one explanation for settler colonial racism might not be a hidden awareness that our possession of the land and resources is illegitimate.
Unlike Wolfe, though, Memmi argues that even if the colonialist wants to murder the colonized, doing so is impossible, because it would mean “eliminating himself” (54):
The colonialist’s existence is so closely aligned with that of the colonized that he will never be able to overcome the argument which states that misfortune is good for something. With all his power he must disown the colonized while their existence is indespensable to his own. Having chosen to maintain the colonial system, he must contribute more vigor to its defense than would have been needed to dissolve it completely. Having become aware of the unjust relationship which ties him to the colonized, he must continually attempt to absolve himself. He never forgets to make a public show of his own virtues, and will argue with vehemence to appear heroic and great. At the same time his privileges arise just as much from his glory as from degrading the colonized. He will persist in degrading them, using the darkest colors to depict them. If need be, he will act to devalue them, annihilate them. But he can never escape from this circle. The distance which colonization places between him and the colonized must be accounted for and, to justify himself, he increases this distance still further by placing the two figures irretrievably in opposition: his glorious position and the despicable one of the colonized. (54-55)
The colonialist, despite possessing personal virtues, “will surely be transformed into a conservative, reactionary, or even a colonial fascist” (55). And yet, “[n]othing and no one can give him the high praise he so avidly seeks as compensation: neither the outsider, indifferent at best, but not a dupe or accessory; nor his native land where he is always suspected and often attacked; not his own daily acts which would ignore the silent revolt of the colonized” (57). In fact, the colonialist “scarcely believes in his own innocence. Deep within himself, the colonialist pleads guilty” (57).
The colonialist will end up over-evaluating the importance of the mother country, while simultaneously devoting “himself to a systematic devaluation of the colonized,” even while realizing that without the colonized, the colony would lost its meaning (66). The colonialist rejects both the colony and the colonized, refusing to remedy its deficiencies, because “the colonialist never planned to transform the colony into the image of his homeland, nor to remake the colonized in his own image! He cannot allow such an equation—it would destroy the principle of his privileges” (69). That equality is impossible “because of the nature of the colonized,” and so “the colonialist resorts to racism. It is significant that racism is part of colonialism throughout the world; and it is no coincidence. Racism sums up and symbolizes the fundamental relation which unites colonialist and colonized” (69-70). According to Memmi,
colonial racism is so spontaneously incorporated in even the most trivial acts and words, that it seems to constitute one of the fundamental patterns of colonialist personality. The frequency of its occurrence, its intensity in colonial relationships, would be astounding if we did not know to what extent it helps the colonialist to live and permits his social introduction. The colonialists are perpetually explaining, justifyng and maintaining (by word as well as by deed) the place and fate of their silent partners in the colonial drama. The colonized are thus trapped by the colonial system and the colonialist maintains his prominent role. (70-71)
Memmi argues that colonial racism has three main ideological components: “one, the gulf between the culture of the colonialist and the colonized; two, the exploitation of these differences for the benefit of the colonialist; three, the use of these supposed differences as standards ob absolute fact” (71). The first point “is the least revealing of the colonialist’s mental attitude”: the colonialist “stresses those things which keep him separate, rather than emphasizing that which might contribute to the foundation of a joint community. In those differences, the colonized is always degraded and the colonialist finds justification for rejecting his subjects” (71). But the differences between colonizer and colonized are removed “from history, time, and therefore possible evolution” by the colonialist (71). Those differences become “biological, or, preferably, metaphysical” (71). Even conversion to the colonizer’s religion would not be able to erase those differences, which is, Memmi suggests, “one of the reasons why colonial missions failed” (73). Racism is therefore “not . . . an incidental detail, but . . . a consubstantial part of colonialism. It is the highest expression of the colonial systema nd one of the most significant features of the colonialist” (74).
“But there is one final act of distortion,” Memmi writes. “The servitude of the colonized seemed scandalous to the colonizer and forced him to explain it away under the pain of ending the scandal and threatening his own existence. Thanks for a double reconstruction of the colonized and himself, he is able both to justify and reassure himself” (75). The colonizer thus sees himself as a “[c]ustodian of the values of civilization and history,” one who brings “light to the colonized’s ignominious darkness” (75). And, “since servitude is part of the nature of the colonized, and domination part of his own,” colonization will never end: it is eternal, and the colonialist “can look to his future without worries of any kind” (75). “After this, everything would be possible and would take on a new meaning,” Memmi suggests:
The colonialist could afford to relax, live benevolently and even munificently. the colonized could only be grateful to him for softening what is coming to him. It is here that the astonishing mental attitude called ‘paternalistic’ comes into play. A paternalist is one who wants to stretch racism and inequality farther—once admitted. It is, if you like, a charitable racism—which is not thereby less skillful nor less profitable. (76)
“Having founded this new moral order where he is by definition master and innocent, the colonialist would at last have given himself absolution,” Memmi concludes. “It is still essential that this order not be questioned by others, and especially not by the colonized” (76). That last statement suggests something about the psychological fragility of the colonizer’s innocence; it will not survive scrutiny or questioning.
Memmi now moves to the book’s second part, “Portrait of the Colonized,” with a chapter entitled “Mythical portrait of the colonized.” One element in that portrait is “the often-cited trait of laziness” (79). “Nothing could better justify the colonizer’s privileged position than his industry, and nothing could better justify the colonized’s destitution than his indolence,” Memmi writes (79). “By his accusation the colonizer establishes the colonized as being lazy,” Memmi continues. “He decides that laziness is constitutional in the very nature of the colonized. It becomes obvious that the colonized, whatever he may undertake, whatever zeal he may apply, could never be anything but lazy. This always brings us back to racism, which is the substantive expression, to the accuser’s benefit, of a real or imaginary trait of the accused” (81). The same analysis could be made of each of the features found in the colonized (81). So the colonized is weak, wicked and backward, inept, poor, ungrateful—all traits that justify the colonizer’s behaviour (81-82). “It is significant that this portrait requires nothing else,” Memmi notes. “It is difficult, for instance, to reconcile most of these features and then to proceed to synthesize them objectively. One can hardly see how the colonized can be simultaneously inferior and wicked, lazy and backward” (82-83). The lack of consistency in this portrait applies to the colonizer’s self-portrait as well (83). “The point is that the colonized means little to the colonizer,” Memmi writes:
Far from wanting to understand him as he really is, the colonizer is preoccupied with making him undergo this urgent change. The mechanism of this remolding of the colonized is revealing in itself. It consists, in the first place, of a series of negations. The colonized is not this, is not that. He is never considered in a positive light; or if he is, the quality which is conceded is the result of a psychological or ethical failing. (83-84)
So the fabled Arab hospitality is seen as “a result of the colonized’s irresponsibility and extravagance, since he has no notion of foresight and economy” (84). “Another sign of the colonized’s depersonalization is what one might call the mark of the plural,” Memmi continues. “The colonized is never characterized in an individual manner; he is entitled only to drown in an anonymous collectivity,” as in the phrase, “They are all the same” (85). “Finally, the colonizer denies the colonized the most precious right granted to most men: liberty,” Memmi states. “Living conditions imposed on the colonized by colonization make no provision for it; indeed, they ignore it. . . . The colonized is not free to choose between beign colonized or not being colonized” (85-86). At the end of “this stubborn effort” to dehumanize the colonized, little is left: “He is surely no longer an alter ego of the colonizer. He is hardly a human being. He tends rapidly toward becoming an object” (86).
Memmi suggests that it is surprising that this image excites “an echo . . . in the colonized himself”:
Constantly confronted with this image of himself, set forth and imposed on all institutions and in every human contact, how could the colonized help reacting to his portrait? It cannot leave him indifferent and remain a veneer which, like an insult, blows with the wind. He ends up recognizing it as one would a detested nickname which has become a familiar description. The accusation disturbs him and worries him even more because he admires and fears his powerful accuser. . . . Willfully created and spread by the colonizer, this mythical and degrading portrait ends up by being accepted and lived with to a certain extent by the colonized. It thus acquires a certain amount of reality and contributes to the true portrait of the colonized. (87-88)
The “adherence of the colonized to colonization,” then, “is the result of colonization and not its cause. It arises after and not before colonial occupation” (88). “In order for the colonizer to be the complete master, it is not enough for him to be so in actual fact, but he must also believe in its legitimacy,” Memmi concludes, and in order “for that legitimacy to be complete, it is not enough for the colonized to be a slave, he must also accept this role” (88-89).” The bond between colonizer and colonized is thus destructive and creative,” Memmi continues. “It destroys and re-creates the two partners of colonization into colonizer and colonized. One is disfigured into an oppressor,” and the other, “into an oppressed creature, whose development is broken and who compromises by his defeat” (89). “Just as the colonizer is tempted to accept his part,” in other words, “the colonized is forced to accept being colonized” (89).
In the following chapter, “Situations of the colonized,” Memmi argues that this mythical portrait “becomes what can be called a social institution. In other words, it defines and establishes concrete situations which close in on the colonized, weigh on him until they bend his conduct and leave their marks on his face” (90). These situations, he continues, “are situations of inadequacy. The ideological aggression which tends to dehumanize and then deceive the colonized finally corresponds to concrete situations which lead to the same result” (91). Moreover, that mythical portrait is “supported by a very solid organization: a government and a judicial system fed and renewed by the colonizer’s historic, economic and cultural needs” (91). “Even if he were insensitive to the calumny and scorn, even if he shrugged his shoulders at insults and jostling, how could the colonized escape the low wages, the agony of his culture, the law which rules him from birth until death?” Memmi asks (91). It is impossible for the colonized to “avoid those situations which create real inadequacy” (91).
“The most serious blow suffered by the colonized is being removed from history and from the community,” Memmi argues. “Colonization usurps any free role in either war nor peace, every decision contributing to his destiny and that of the world, and all cultural and social responsibility” (91). The colonized carries the burden of history, but he is not its subject, merely an object (92). Because the colonized does not govern, “he ends up by losing both interest and feeling for control. How could he be interested in something from which he is so resolutely excluded?” (95). In addition, “[t]he colonized enjoys none of the attributes of citizenship; neither his own, which is dependent, contested and smothered, nor that of the colonizer. He can hardly adhere to one or claim the other” (96). According to Memmi, “[t]his social and historical mutilation gives rise to the most serious consequences. It contributes to bringing out the deficiencies in the other aspects of the colonized’s life and, by a countereffect which is frequent in human processes, it is itself fed by the colonized’s other infirmities” (96-97). The society either revolts, or it calcifies (98). “Colonized society is a diseased society in which internal dynamics no longer succeed in creating new structures,” Memmi writes. “Its century-hardened face has become nothing more than a mask under which it slowly smothers and dies (98-99). The colonized’s “institutions are dead or petrified,” and the colonized “often becomes ashamed of these institutions, as of a ridiculous and overaged monument” (103). The “few material traces” of the colonized’s past are erased, and replaced with those celebrating the colonizer (104).
Memmi discusses the place of language—in his argument, Arabic—in the colony. “If only the mother tongue was allowed some influence on current social life, or was used across the counters of government offices, or directed the postal service; but this is not the case,” he notes. “The entire bureaucracy, the entire court system, all industry hears and uses the colonizer’s language” (106). This argument reminds me of something my friend Art told me once: Indigenous languages need official recognition if they are to survive. Without such recognition, “bilingualism is necessary,” although such bilingualism symbolizes, to Memmi, two worlds in conflict (107). Colonized writers need to be able to use European languages in order to be published, and it is only in those language that such writers can advocate for their own languages (110).
Memmi then turns to the question of what might have happened to the colonized without the experience of colonization, and the reason colonization happened in the first place. Such questions, he states, are not important:
What does count is the present reality of colonization and the colonized. We have no idea what the colonized would have been without colonization, but we certainly see what has happened as a result of it. To subdue and exploit, the colonizer pushed the colonized out of the historical and social, cultural and technical current. What is real and verifiable is that the colonized’s culture, society and technology are seriously damaged. He has not acquired new ability and a new culture. One patent result of colonization is that there are no more colonized artists and not yet any colonized technicians. (114)
Memmi’s claim about technicians might be true in Canada, although I’m not sure that it is, but his claim about artists is definitely not. Of course, he wasn’t writing about Canada, but I need to be cautious about borrowing too freely from his analysis. In any case, he continues, “colonization weakens the colonized and . . . all those weaknesses contribute to one another” (115). For instance, the country’s lack of industrialization leads to “a slow economic collapsed of the colonized” (115). Meanwhile, the colonizer “enriches himself further by selling raw materials rather than competing with industry in the home country” (116). There are few educational opportunities for the colonized as well, and even if universities and apprenticeships existed, their graduates would find it difficult to apply their training (116). “Everything in the colonized is deficient, and everything contributes to this deficiency—even his body, which is poorly fed, puny and sick,” Memmi writes. “Many lengthy discussions would be saved if, in the beginning, it was agreed that there is this wretchedness—collective, permanent, immense. Simple and plain biological wretchedness, chronic hunger of an entire people, malnutrition and illness” (117). Memmi concludes the chapter by asking how a social system which perpetuates such distress endure: “How can one dare compare the advantages and disadvantages of colonization? What advantages, even if a thousand times more important, could make such internal and external catastrophes acceptable?” (118).
The next chapter, “The two answers of the colonized,” begins with the recognition that “[t]he body and face of the colonized are not a pretty sight,” because they display the damaged caused by “such historical misfortune” (119). “The colonized does not exist in accordance with the colonial myth, but he is nevertheless recongizable,” Memmi writes. “Being a creature of oppression, he is bound to be a creature of want” (119). There are two “historically possible solutions” to this situation which may be tried: the first is to assimilate, “to become equal to that splendid model and to resemble him to the point of disappearing in him,” a step through which the colonized “rejects himself with the most tenacity” (120-21). “That is to say that he rejects, in another way, the colonial situation,” Memmi writes. “Rejection of self and love of another are common to all candidates for assimilation. Moreover, the two components of this attempt at liberation are closely tied. Love of the colonizer is subtended by a complex of feelings ranging from shame to self-hate” (121). However, “[t]he candidate for assimilation almost always comes to tire of the exorbitant price which he must pay and which he never finishes owing” (123). Moreover, the colonizer never accepts the colonized who tries to assimilate (124). Assimilation, in other words, is impossible (125). “To say that the colonizer could or should accept assimilation and, hence, the colonized’s emancipation, means to topple the colonial relationship,” Memmi argues (126).
If assimilation and colonization are contradictory (127), what option is left? Revolt (127). “Far from being surprised at the revolts of colonized peoples, we should be, on the contrary, surprised that they are not more frequent and more violent,” Memmi writes (127). The colonizer guards against revolts in many ways, including using corruption and police oppression to abort “all popular movements” and cause “their brutal and rapid destruction,” but the colonized as well, by admiring their conquerors, “hope that the almighty power of the colonizer might bear the fruit of infinite goodness” (127). “The colonial situation, by its own internal inevitability, brings on revolt,” Memmi continues. “For the colonial condition cannot be adjusted to; like an iron collar, it can only be broken” (128). Once assimilation is abandoned,
the colonized’s liberation must be carried out through a recovery of self and of autonomous dignity. Attempts at imitating the colonizer required self-denial; the colonizer’s rejection is the indispensable prelude to self-discovery. That accusing and annihilating image must be shaken off; oppression must be attacked boldly since it is impossible to go around it. After having been rejected for so long by the colonizer, the day has come when it is the colonized who must refuse the colonizer. (128)
Considered by the colonizer as a homogenous mass, the colonized responds “by rejecting all the colonizers en bloc. The distinction between deed and intent has no great significance in the colonial situation. In the eyes of the colonized, all Europeans in the colonies are de facto colonizers, and whether they want to be or not, they are colonizers in some ways” (130). Their economic and political privileges, for instance, or their participation “in an effectively negative complex toward the colonized,” make them colonizers (130). “If xenophobia and racism consist of accusing an entire human group as a whole, condemning each individual of that group, seeing in him an irremediably noxious nature,” Memmi continues, “then the colonized has, indeed, become a xenophobe and a racist” (130). And yet, he writes, it must be acknowledged that “the colonized’s racism is the result of a more general delusion: the colonialist delusion” (131). In other words, the colonized becomes to accept the colonialist’s racist, Manichean division of the colony and, indeed, the whole world (131). “Being definitely excluded from half the world, why should he not suspect it of confirming his condemnation?” Memmi asks. “Why should he not judge it and condemn it in its turn?” (131). Such a response, Memmi suggests, is “not aggressive but defensive racism” (131).
The colonized has been excluded from universal human values, and “[t]he same passion which made him admire and absorb Europe shall make him assert his differences; since those differences, after all, are within him and correctly constitute his true self” (132). The young intellectual, Memmi writes, rediscovers a previously rejected religious faith: “Assigning attention to the old myths, giving them virility, he regenerates them dangerously. They find in this an unexpected power which makes them extend beyond the limited intentions of the colonized’s leaders” (133). The colonized’s language is also revitalized (134). “This must be done no matter what the price paid by the colonized,” Memmi writes. “Thus he will be nationalistic but not, of course, internationalistic. Naturally, by so doing, he runs the risk of falling into exclusionism and chauvinism, of sticking to the most narrow principles, and of setting national solidarity against human solidarity—and even ethnic solidarity against national solidarity” (135). But, he continues, “to expect the colonized to open his mind to the world and be a humanist and internationalist would seem to be ludicrous thoughtlessness. He is still regaining possession of himself, still examining himself with astonishment passionately demanding the return of his language” (135).
Even though the colonized people reject the colonizer’s myths, they still admit that they correspond, to some extent, to that picture of themselves. “He is starting a new life but continues to subscribe to the colonizers’ deception,” Memmi notes, because “his situation is shaped by colonization. It is obvious that he is reclaiming a people that is suffering deficiencies in its body and spirit, in its very responses” (137):
He is restored to a not very glorious history pierced through with frightful holes, to a moribund culture which he had planned to abandon, to frozen traditions, to a rusted tongue. The heritage which he eventually accepts bears the burden of a liability which would discourage anyone. He must endorse notes and debts, the debts being many and large. It is also a fact that the institutions of the colony do not operate directly for him. The education system is directed to him only haphazardly. The roads are open to him only because they are pure offerings. (137)
But to go through with the revolt, the colonized must “accept those inhibitions and amputations” (137). “[T]he rebellious colonized begins by accepting himself as something negative,” Memmi writes, and this “negative element has become an essential part of his revival and struggle, and will be proclaimed and glorified to the hilt” (138). “Suddenly, exactly to the reverse of the colonialist accusation, the colonized, his culture, his country, everything that belongs to him, everything he represents, become perfectly positive elements,” Memmi continues, a “countermythology” born from protest (138-39). “In order to witness the colonized’s complete cure”—the colonized’s emergence from this countermythology into an authentic sense of self—“his alienation must completely cease. We must await the complete disappearance of colonization—including the period of revolt” (141).
In his conclusion, Memmi suggests that “the colonizer is a disease of the European, from which he must be completely cured and protected. There is also a drama of the colonizer which would be absurd and unjust to underestimate”: a “difficult and painful treatment, extraction and reshaping of the present conditions of existence” (147). “Colonization disfigures the colonizer,” Memmi contends (147). The colonizer who rejects colonization’s role “is unlivable” and “cannot long be sustained” (148). The colonial situation itself must disappear (148). The two propositions made by colonization—the extermination of the colonized or their assimilation—will also have to disappear (148). “Extermination saves colonization so little that it actually contradicts the colonial process,” Memmi contends, confusingly offering the genocide in the American west as an example (149). He also argues that assimilation is “the opposite of colonization,” because it “tends to eliminate the distinctions between the colonizers and the colonized,a nd thereby eliminates the colonial relationship” (149-50). If the colonizer “refuses to abandon his profitable sicknesses, he will sooner or later be forced to do so by history,” since “one day he will be forced by the colonized to give in” (150). Revolt—successful revolt—is inevitable: “The refusal of the colonized cannot be anything but absolute, that is, not only revolt, but a revolution” (150). That’s because “colonization materially kills the colonized,” and “it kills him spiritually. Colonization distorts relationships, destroys or petrifies institutions, and corrupts men, both colonizers and colonized. To live, the colonized needs to do away with colonization” (151). And then, once “he ceases to be a colonized—he will become something else” (153). “Having reconquered all his dimensions, the former colonized will have become a man like any other,” Memmi concludes. “There will be the ups and downs of all men to be sure, but at least he will be a whole and free man” (153).
I can’t tell whether Memmi’s depiction of the colonized is accurate; it appears to be, but I don’t have enough knowledge to know for sure. I do think his representation of the colonizer is right on the money, however. His argument is so powerful that it is hard to find points where I disagree. I would have to say that his claims that extermination undercuts the colonial relationship is belied by the experience of Indigenous people in North America, and by settler colonial theorists like Wolfe, who note that elimination of the native is one of the options available for securing the land for settlers. I think he’s wrong about assimilation as well, although I’m less certain of that, since the various methods of forced assimilation in Canada, such as residential schools, did such a terrible job that one wonders if assimilation was really their intention, rather than just cultural and linguistic extinction without assimilation. I’m not sure. Part of the reason for my confusion here is the different ways colonialism has been expressed in Canada and in Memmi’s Tunisia. But Canadians can learn from Memmi’s work, and although it’s not an easy or a happy read, The Colonizer and the Colonized is an important text that I’ll return to in the future.
Work Cited
Memmi, Albert. The Colonizer and the Colonized, expanded edition, Beacon, 1991.
Wolfe, Patrick. “Settler Colonialism and the Elimination of the Native.” Journal of Genocide Research, vol. 8, no. 4, 2006, pp. 387-409. DOI:10.1080/14623520601056240.
In my last blog entry, I wondered whether some of the strange justifications Eva Mackey describes settler descendants making about their occupation of Indigenous land—the claim, for instance, that there were no Indigenous people living on the land when settlers first arrived—might come from “a deeply buried recognition that the claims Settlers make about Crown sovereignty and the rightness of their presence on Indigenous lands are, frankly, specious.” I wondered if there might be any evidence to support that suspicion. That’s the reason I decided to read Eve Tuck’s and C. Ree’s strange, short text (it’s not an essay), “A Glossary of Haunting.” I was hoping it might suggest something about the effect such hidden recognitions might have on settlers. I was disappointed, though; that’s not what Tuck and Ree are thinking about in this text. I might have to return to Gabriele Schwab’s book Haunting Legacies: Violent Histories and Transgenerational Trauma to find evidence of those kinds of hidden recognitions, since Schwab talks about the transgenerational effects of the trauma perpetrators experience, if I’m serious about following up my hunch. Or perhaps I might find some discussion of that idea somewhere else. I’m sure I’m not the first person to wonder if it’s a possibility.
In any case, Tuck and Ree begin by stating that their text presents an alphabetized glossary about justice, but more specifically, “about righting (and sometimes wronging) wrongs; about hauntings, mercy, monsters, generational debt, horror films, and what they might mean for understanding settler colonialism, ceremony, revenge, and decolonization” (640). The authors describe this glossary as “a fractal,” because “it includes the particular and the general, violating the terms of settler colonial knowledge which require the separation of the particular from the general, the hosted from the host, personal from the public, the foot(note) from the head(line), the place from the larger narrative of nation, the people from specific places” (640). “This glossary is a story, not an exhaustive encyclopedia,” “a story that seethes in its subtlety,” they write (640). Strangely, they state, “In telling you all of this in this way, I am resigning myself and you to the idea that parts of my telling are confounding. I care about you understanding, but I care more about concealing parts of myself from you. I don’t trust you very much. You are not always aware of how you can be dangerous to me, and this makes me dangerous to you” (640). It seems, then, that they are writing in the voice of one of the monsters they describe in their text. The adoption of the voice of that monster–of the colonized subject–occurs at other points in this text as well.
Such monsters are similar to the creatures one sees in American or Japanese horror films, although they explain that there are important differences between horror films produced in those two countries. “Mainstream narrative films in the United States, especially in horror, are preoccupied with the hero, who is perfectly innocent, but who is assaulted by monstering or haunting just the same,” they write (640). Audiences “are meant to feel outrage in the face of haunting, we are beckoned to root for the innocent hero, who could be us, because haunting is undeserved, even random,” and “[t]he hero spends the length of the film righting wrongs, slaying the monster, burying the undead, performing the missing rite, all as a way of containment” (641). Japanese horror films are very different; they invoke, instead, “a strategy more akin to wronging, or revenge” (641). “The difference between notions of justice popularized in the US horror films and notions of justice in these examples of horror films from Japan,” they explain,
is that in the former, the hauntings are positioned as undeserved, and the innocent hero must destroy the monster to put the world in balance again. . . . In the latter, because the depth of injustice that begat the monster or ghost is acknowledged, the hero does not think herself to be innocent, or try to achieve reconciliation or healing, only mercy, often in the form of passing on the debt. (641)
Japanese horror films, then, recognize past injustices, while American horror films pretend that those injustices don’t exist.
The particular form of injustice Tuck and Ree are interested in is colonialism. “Colonization is as horrific as humanity gets,” they write, noting that it inevitably involves genocide (642). Because settler colonialism is a structure (following the work of Patrick Wolfe) “and not just the nefarious way nations are born,” it is “an ongoing horror made invisible by its persistence” (642). Settler colonialism, in particular,
is the management of those who have been made killable, once and future ghosts—those that had been destroyed, but also those that are generated in every generation. . . . Settler horror, then, comes about as part of this management, of the anxiety, the looming but never arriving guilt, the impossibility of forgiveness, the inescapability of retribution. (642)
I wonder if the same thing couldn’t be said of other forms of colonialism as well: they all seem to be about what Tuck and Ree call “making-killable,” a way of “making subhuman, of transforming beings into masses that can be produced and destroyed, another form of empire’s mass production” (648). In any case, if settler horror is part of the management of the anxiety produced by the genocidal actions of settlers, haunting, on the other hand, “is the relentless remembering and reminding that will not be appeased by settler society’s assurances of innocence and reconciliation. Haunting is acute and general; individuals are haunted, but so are societies” (642). “The United States is permanently haunted by the slavery, genocide, and violence entwinted in its first, present and future days,” they write (642). “Haunting doesn’t hope to change people’s perceptions, nor does it hope for reconciliation. Haunting lies precisely in its refusal to stop. . . . this refusal to stop is its own form of resolving. For ghosts, the haunting is the resolving, it is not what needs to be resolved” (642). “Haunting is the cost of subjugation,” they continue. “It is the price paid for violence, for genocide” (643).
Tuck and Ree retell the Homeric story of Cyclops, making her into an anti-hero who only wants to be left alone: “Her enormous eye sees through deceptive Odysseus who feigns codes of hospitality to receive the sheep as gifts. She will keep her land and sheep out of reach, a thing of myth. She does things that are monstrous to violate the colonizer and to wage vengeance for future ghosts, none of which is legible to Homer” (644). Cyclops, in this version, “walks the vastness of [Odysseus’s] kingdom, slowly becoming a ghost. . . . Her revenge feeds her, making her opaque, anti-gravity, a black hole. . . . She will strand Odysseus in constant unease, bereft of his cherished and clever reason” (644). “Revenge requires symmetry with the crime,” they argue:
To the (purported) (would-be) hero, revenge is monstrous, heard but not seen, insatiable, blind with desire, the Cyclops robbed of her eye. To the self-designated hero, revenge hails a specter of something best forgotten, a ghost from a criminal past.
To the monster, revenge is oxygen. (644)
In this reading, then, Cyclops stands in for the colonized, for the Indigenous or enslaved peoples whose genocide formed the basis for the existence of the American nation-state, while Odysseus is a paradigmatic figure for the greedy and heedless colonizer, taking what is not his.
What, then, of decolonization, the subject of Tuck’s and K. Wayne Yang’s essay “Decolonization Is Not A Metaphor”? “Decolonization must mean attending to ghosts, and arresting widespread denial of the violence done to them,” Tuck and Ree write (647).But decolonization isn’t really about social justice (a claim Tuck and Yang make in their essay):
Decolonization is a (dearly) departure from social justice. . . . Listing terrors is not a form of social justice, as if outing (a) provides relief for a presumed victim or (b) repairs a wholeness or (c) ushers in an improved social awareness that leads to (a) and (b). That is not what I am doing here, saying it all so that things will get better. Social justice is a term that gets thrown around like some destination, a resolution, a fixing. “No justice, no peace,” and all of that. But justice and peace don’t exactly cohabitate. The promise of social justice sometimes rings false, smells consumptive, like another manifest destiny. Like you can get there, but only if you climb over me. (647)
There’s little hope here, or elsewhere in the essay, about the possibilities of decolonization. The effects of colonization, instead, are ongoing and irreparable.
Next, Tuck and Ree describe “damage narratives,” adopting the perspective of the colonized to do so. “Damage narratives are the only stories that get told about me, unless I’m the one that’s telling them,” they write. “People have made their careers on telling stories of damage about me, about communities like mine. Damage is the only way that monsters and future ghosts are conjured” (647). Instead of damage, this voice prefers to speak of desire, “a refusal to trade in damage; desire is an antidote, a medicine to damage narratives” (647). Desire is
a recognition of suffering, the costs of settler colonialism and capitalism and how we still thrive in the face of loss anyway; the parts of us that won’t be destroyed. When I write or speak about desire, I am trying to get out from underneath the ways that my communities and I are always depicted. I insist on telling stories of desire, of complexity, of variegation, of promising myself one thing at night, and doing another in the morning. (647-48)
Desire “is productive, it makes itself, and in making itself, it makes reality” (648). Narratives of desire, then, are better than narratives about the damage done by colonization.
The only way that decolonization can occur, it seems, is through an act of mercy towards the colonizer by the colonized, although the version of mercy that Tuck and Ree provide is complicated:
Mercy is a temporary pause in haunting, requiring a giver and a receiver. The house goes quiet again, but only for a time. Mercy is a gift only ghosts can grant the living, and a gift ghosts cannot be forced, extorted, seduced, or tricked into giving. Even then, the fantasy of relief is deciduous. The gift is an illusion of relief and closure. Haunting can be deferred, delayed, and disseminated, but with some crimes of humanity—the violence of colonization—there is no putting to rest. Decolonization is not an exorcism of ghosts, nor is it charity, parity, balance, or forgiveness. Mercy is not freeing the settler from his crimes, nor is it therapy for the ghosts. Mercy is the power to give (and take). Mercy is a tactic. Mercy is ongoing, temporary, and in constant need of regeneration. Social justice may want to put things to rest, may believe in the repair in reparations, may consider itself an architect or a destination, may believe in utopic building materials which are bound to leak, may even believe in peace. Mercy is not any of that. Mercy is just a reprieve; mercy does not resolve or absolve. Mercy is a sort of power granted over another. Mercy can be merciless. (648-49)
I have to admit that while I recognize the rhetorical move in the last sentences of that quotation, the authors’ desire to express a paradox, I honestly don’t understand how mercy is merciless. Are all forms of power merciless? Is that the suggestion?
“People who deny the persistence of settler colonialism are like the heroes in American horror films, astonished that the monster would have trouble with them,” Tuck and Ree continue (649). But those monsters have been wronged, they seek justice, and there is no way to permanently defeat them: “monsters can only be deferred, disseminated; the door to their threshold can only be shut on them for so long” (649). This argument returns to their earlier discussions of decolonization and mercy. “Unruly, full of desire, unsettling, around the edges of haunting whispers revenge,” they continue. “The rage of the dead, a broken promise, a violent ruin, the seeds of haunting, an engine for curses. It can and cannot be tolerated. Not like justice. Everyone nods their head to justice. Who can disagree with justice?” (651). Revenge, however, “is necessarily unspeakable to justice. We have better ways to deal with revenge now. But revenge and justice overlap, feed and deplete the other” (651-52). “Revenge is one head of the many-headed creature of justice,” they claim (652). They suggest that we are always told that revenge is wrong, that it is “wronging wrongs, a form of double-wronging” (654). (Two wrongs don’t make a right—that kind of thing.) “At the same time, righting wrongs is so rare,” they continue. “Justice is so fleeting. And there are crimes that are too wrong to right” (654). But “wronging wrongs” is the work of monsters:
Wronging wrongs, so reviled in waking life, seems to be the work of nightmares and hauntings and all the stuff that comes after opportunities to right wrongs and write wrongs have been exhausted. Unreadable and irrational, wronging wrongs is the work of now and future ghosts and monsters, the supply of which is ever-growing. You’ll have to find someone to pull on your ears to bring you out of the nightmares, to call you home and help you remember who you are, and to hope that the ghosts will be willing to let you go. (654)
If I’m understanding this conclusion correctly, only an act of mercy on the part of the wronged monster(s) can end the “nightmares” that settlers experience.
I’ve left a lot out of this summary—all of the descriptions of Ree’s installation artwork, and the strange appendix, “The Haunting of the Form O.” Like many attempts by social scientists to appropriate creative forms in the expression of scholarly arguments, the result here is odd and not entirely effective, I think, but it’s an interesting and potentially useful text. It’s certainly pessimistic about the possibilities of settler decolonization, which is more or less the way I would read “Decolonization Is Not A Metaphor” as well. Tuck and her collaborators don’t hold out many possibilities for settler decolonization, I think. Perhaps that’s correct; perhaps decolonization (as a way to end the haunting this text describes) would have to be an act of mercy on the part of the colonized (and decolonizing) subject. I don’t know. I would like to know more about the haunting this text talks about, though. What form does that haunting take? That question remains unanswered. Perhaps I do need to reread Gabriele Schwab’s book, or do some more research into haunting and colonization, if I’m going to be able to substantiate my hunch, to turn it into something more than just a hunch.
Works Cited
Schwab, Gabriele. Haunting Legacies: Violent Histories and Transgenerational Trauma,Columbia University Press, 2010.
Tuck, Eve, and C. Ree. “A Glossary of Haunting.” Handbook of Autoethnography, edited by Stacy Holman Jones, Tony E. Adams, and Carolyn Ellis, Routledge, 2013, pp. 639-58.
Tuck, Eve, and K. Wayne Yang. “Decolonization Is Not A Metaphor.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, vol. 1, no. 1, 2012, pp. 1-40.
My walking is finished, and even though I ought to be exploring the sights here in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, I’m in the hotel room, working. These texts won’t read themselves, after all, and I’m not going to hit my goal of 100 texts by the end of August. I’ve just been having too much fun walking!
“Decolonization Is Not A Metaphor” is one of the key texts in the study of settler colonialism, and for that reason it’s important that I read it. It begins with two epigraphs from Frantz Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth on decolonization, which in Fanon’s case meant the departure of the imperial power (France, since Fanon wrote The Wretched of the Earth in Algeria during that country’s struggle for independence) from a colony and the creation of an independent national government. (The Wretched of the Earth is the next thing I’ll be reading for this project, mostly because one of my supervisors suggested that it would be valuable.) The first epigraph suggests that decolonization is “a program of complete disorder” (qtd. 2), which reflects (I think) the authors’ argument that the goal of decolonization is open-ended and undetermined, and that it is a historical process, which cannot be understood unless we “discern the movements which give it historical form and content” (qtd. 2). The second epigraph, which suggests that “the settler knows perfectly well that no phraseology can be a substitute for reality” (qtd. 2), reflects the authors’ contention that the word “decolonization” needs to be understood literally rather than rhetorically.
Tuck and Yang begin by noting that their area of research is education, and in particular the ways that “settler colonialism has shaped schooling and educational research in the United States and other settler colonial nation-states” (2). That work requires an engagement with the meaning of decoloniation, “what it wants and requires” (2). Tuck and Yang object to “the ease with which the language of decolonization has been superficially adopted into education and other social sciences, supplanting prior ways of talking about social justice, critical methodologies, or approaches which decenter settler perspectives” (2). Decolonization must not be subsumed by those projects, they argue, noting that decolonization is often discussed without mentioning Indigenous peoples or their struggles for sovereignty or “the contributions of Indigenous intellectuals and activists to theories and frameworks of decolonization” (3). “[T]his kind of inclusion is a form of enclosure, dangerous in how it domesticates decolonization,” they write. “It is also a foreclosure, limiting in how it recapitulates dominant theories of social change” (3). The rhetorical use of the word “decolonization” is therefore “another form of settler appropriation” (3).
This essay, published in the first issue of a journal called Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education, & Society, is an attempt “to clarify that decolonization is not a metaphor”: “When metaphor invades decolonization, it recenters whiteness, it resettles theory, it extends innocence to the settler, it entertains a settler future” (3). “Our goal in this essay is to remind readers what is unsettling about decolonization—what is unsettling and should be unsettling,” they suggest (3). The notions of unsettling (of theory, of politics, of identity), of decentring whiteness, of denying both innocence to settlers and a future to the settler identity, are central points in this essay. So is the notion of difficulty: anything that seems to be too easy is, according to Tuck and Yang, a wrong approach to or misunderstanding of decolonization.
“There is a long and bumbled history of non-Indigenous peoples making moves to alleviate the impacts of colonialization,” Tuck and Yang write. “The too-easy adoption of decolonizing discourse (making decolonization a metaphor) is just one part of that history and it taps into pre-existing tropes that get in the way of more meaningful potential alliances” (3). Those tropes are “moves to innocence” for settlers; they “problematically attempt to reconcile settler guilt and complicity, and rescue settler futurity” (3). A discussion of those moves to innocence is at the core of this essay. Those moves to innocence include:
Settler nativism
Fantasizing adoption
Colonial equivocation
Conscientization
At risk-ing/Asterisk-ing Indigenous peoples
Re-occupation and urban homesteading[.] (4)
“Such moves ultimately represent fantasies of easier paths to reconciliation,” they write:
attending to what is irreconcilable within settler colonial relations and what is incommensurable between decolonizing projects and other social justice projects will help to reduce the frustration of attempts at solidarity; but the attention won’t get anyone off the hook from the hard, unsettling work of decolonization. (4)
For that reason, they continue, they have also included “a discussion of interruptions that unsettle innocence and recognize incommensurability” (4).
First, though Tuck and Yang distinguish between external colonialism (colonial activities outside the borders of the imperial nation) and internal colonialism (colonial activities within the borders of the imperial nation). However, neither of these definitions adequately describe the form of colonialism in countries where the colonizers have come to stay. “Settler colonialism operates through internal/external colonial modes simultaneously because there is no spatial separation between metropole and colony,” they write. “The horizons of the settler colonial nation-state are total and require a mode of total appropriation of Indigenous life and land, rather than the selective expropriation of profit-producing fragments” (5). What makes settler colonialism different from other forms of colonialism is the fact that “settlers come with the intention of making a new home on the land, a homemaking that insists on settler sovereignty over all things in their new domain” (5). That homemaking means that the most important concern of settler colonialism is land, “both because the settlers make Indigenous land their new home and source of capital, and also because the disruption of Indigenous relationships represents a profound epistemic, ontological, cosmological violence” (5). They cite Patrick Wolfe’s famous dictum: settler colonialism is a structure rather than an event (5). That structure remakes land into property and restricts human relationships to land to property ownership. “Epistemological, ontological, and cosmological relationships to land are interred, indeed made pre-modern and backward,” they write. “Made savage” (5).
“In order for the settlers to make a place their home, they must destroy and disappear the Indigenous peoples that live there,” Tuck and Yang write:
For the settlers, Indigenous peoples are in the way and, in the destruction of Indigenous peoples, Indigenous communities, and over time and through law and policy, Indigenous peoples’ claims to land under settler regimes, land is recast as property and as a resource. Indigenous peoples must be erased, must be made into ghosts. (6)
They also suggest that “settler colonialism involves the subjugation and forced labor of chattel slaves,” a claim that is not true of all settler colonial states; while slavery was legal in what is now Canada until the early 19th century, for example, it was not a central part of the economy there as it was in Spanish colonies in Central and South America, as well as in the United States. Perhaps that distinction doesn’t matter. It’s true that the settler “sees himself as holding dominion over the earth and its flora and fauna, as the anthropocentric normal, and as more developed, more human, more deserving than other groups or species” (6). (That way of thinking is the root of the planet’s current ecological crises.) “The settler is making a new ‘home’ and that home is rooted in a homesteading worldview where the wild land and wild people were made for his benefit,” Tuck and Yang continue. “He can only make his identity as a settler by making the land produce, and produce excessively, because ‘civilization’ is defined as production in excess of the ‘natural’ world (i.e. in excess of the sustainable production already present in the Indigenous world)” (6). For Tuck and Yang, that excess production requires slavery, although in the part of Canada where I live it actually required mechanized agriculture. Moreover, “[s]ettlers are not immigrants,” Tuck and Yang contend. “Immigrants are beholden to the Indigenous laws and epistemologies of the lands they migrate to. Settlers become the law, supplanting Indigenous laws and epistemologies” (6-7). That is, I think, Harold Johnson’s point in his book Two Families: Treaties and Government: when the Cree chiefs who negotiated Treaty 6 engaged the Crown representatives in a pipe ceremony, they were adopting them (and the settlers who would follow) and expecting they would behave like the immigrants Tuck and Yang describe here, rather than like settlers.
Decolonization in settler colonial situations is complicated, Tuck and Yang contend, “because empire, settlement, and internal colony have no spatial separation. Each of these features of settler colonialism in the US context—empire, settlement, and internal colony—make it a site of contradictory decolonial desires” (7). Thinking of decolonization in metaphorical ways “allows people to equivocate these contradictory desires because it turns decolonization into an empty signifier to be filled by any track towards liberation. In reality, the tracks walk all over land/people in settler contexts” (7). For Tuck and Yang,
decolonization in the settler colonial context must involve the repatriation of land simultaneous to the recognition of how land and relations to land have always already been differently understood and enacted; that is, all of the land, and not just symbolically. This is precisely why decolonization is necessarily unsettling, especially across lines of solidarity. (7)
“Settler colonialism and its decolonization implicates and unsettles everyone,” they conclude (7).I agree that repatriation of land is central to decolonization, and that idea certainly unsettles me, because although I was born on stolen land, it’s also the only home I’ve ever known, and I have nowhere else to go. The notion that “all of the land” must be repatriated is a political impossibility for that reason. Yes, that’s what must be done for decolonization to take place in a settler colonial context; but it is also what will not happen, because the settler majority will not stand for it. That contradiction implicates all of us and ought to unsettle us as well.
“Everything within a settler colonial society strains to destroy or assimilate the Native in order to disappear them from the land,” Tuck and Yang argue. That is the reason Settler society can have “multiple simultaneous and conflicting messages about Indigenous peoples, such as all Indians are dead, located in faraway reservations, that contemporary Indigenous people are less indigenous than prior generations, and that all Americans are a ‘little bit Indian’” (9). These fantasies constitute desires to erase Indigenous peoples, “because the death of pre-modern ways of life is thought to be inevitable,” and that erasure would provide a resolution to the colonial situation “through the absolute and total destruction or assimilation of original inhabitants” (9). The failure of that destruction “prompts multiple forms of settler anxiety,” because the presence of Indigenous peoples, “who make a priori claims to land and ways of being,” is “a constant reminder that the settler colonial project is incomplete” (9). The metaphorical use of the term “decolonization” is “a form of this anxiety, because it is a premature attempt at reconciliation”; it is “one way the settler, disturbed by her own settler status, tries to escape or contain the unbearable searchlight of complicity, of having harmed others just by being one’s self” (9). “The desire to reconcile is just as relentless as the desire to disappear the Native,” they continue: “it is a desire to not to have to deal with this (Indian) problem anymore” (9).
Tuck and Yang take the idea of settler moves to innocence from the work of Janet Mawhinney. These moves to innocence are the result of a desire “to find some mercy or relief in the face of the relentless of settler guilt and haunting” (9). “Directly and indirectly benefitting from the erasure and assimilation of Indigenous peoples is a difficult reality for settlers to accept,” they contend, and so Settlers “hurry toward any reprieve” (9). “Settler moves to innocence are those strategies that attempt to relieve the settler of feelings of guilt or responsibility without giving up land or power or privilege, without having to change much at all,” they continue. “In fact, settler scholars may gain professional kudos or a boost in their reputations for being so sensitive or self-aware. Yet settler moves to innocence are hollow, they only serve the settler” (10). Their discussion of these moves to innocence may make their Settler readers embarrassed or uncomfortable or feel implicated, and it seems that’s the point. Their goal in this discussion “is to provide a framework of excuses, distractions, and diversions from decolonization” (10). That framework is intended to make us “more impatient with each other, less likely to accept gestures and half-steps, and more willing to press for acts which unsettle innocence” (10).
Tuck and Yang then discuss the moves to innocence they listed earlier in the essay. The first move is claiming to have an Indigenous ancestor. This “is a settler move to innocence because it is an attempt to deflect a settler identity, while continuing to enjoy settler privilege and occupying stolen land” (11). “Settler nativism, through the claiming of a long-lost ancestory, invests in these specific racializations of Indigenous people and Black people, and disbelieves the sovereign authority of Indigenous nations to determine tribal membership,” Tuck and Yang argue. “Ancestry is different from tribal membership; Indigenous identity and tribal membership are questions that Indigenous communities alone have the right to struggle over and define, not DNA tests, heritage websites, and certainly not the settler state” (13). “Settler nativism is about imagining an Indian past and a settler future,” they continue, while “tribal sovereignty has provided for an Indigenous present and various Indigenous intellectuals theorize decolonization as Native futures without a settler state” (13).
The second move to innocence is settler adoption fantasies. “These fantasies can mean the adoption of Indigenous practices and knowledge, but more, refer to those narratives in the settler colonial imagination in which the Native (understanding that he is becoming extinct) hands over his land, his claim to the land, his very Indian-ness to the settler for safe-keeping,” Tuck and Yang write. “This is a fantasy that is invested in a settler futurity and dependent on the foreclosure of an Indigenous futurity” (14). They discuss James Fenimore Cooper’s Leatherstocking Tales as an example. “In the unwritten decolonial version of Cooper’s story, Hawkeye would lose his land back to the Mohawk,” they write. “Hawkeye would shoot his last arrow, or his last long-rifle shot, return his eagle feather, and would be renamed Natty Bumppo, settler on Native land. The story would end at the moment of this recognition” (17). That ending, though, would leave a number of questions open: “Would a conversation follow after that between Native and the last settler? Would the settler leave or just vanish? Would he ask to stay, and if he did, who would say yes? These are questions that will be addressed at decolonization, and not a priori in order to appease anxieties for a settler future” (17). Is it likely, though, that settlers would “just vanish”? Where would they—we—go? Isn’t that a rather tidy resolution to a pretty big problem for decolonization?
It seems to me that Tuck and Yang are merging two separate ideas here. Isn’t the adoption of Indigenous practices and knowledge different from the narratives in which land and identity are given to Settlers “for safe-keeping”? Is reading Indigenous writers, not a way of adopting, or at least learning about, Indigenous knowledge? Isn’t it necessary to acquire that kind of knowledge in order to understand settler colonialism and its effects? Moreover, I’ve heard some Elders describe some ceremonies as open to anyone. For instance, I recently had a conversation with an Elder in which she was surprised to hear that I was reluctant to smudge on my own, even though I find it helpful and grounding. “Why not?” she asked. “I don’t want to appropriate customs that aren’t mine,” I answered. She didn’t think that was a good reason. Clearly not everyone is focused on issues of appropriation or adoption.
The third move to innocence is colonial equivocation, by which Tuck and Yang mean “the homogenizing of various experiences of oppression as colonization” (17). They want to separate those experiences of oppression from colonization. The “logical endpoint” of antiracism, they suggest, “the attainment of equal legal and cultural entitlements, is actually an investment in settler colonialism,” presumably because it accepts the authority of Settler society. “Indeed, even the ability to be a minority citizen in the settler nation means an option to become a brown settler,” they continue. “For many people of color, becoming a subordinate settler is an option even when becoming white is not” (18). They also distinguish between anti-colonial critique and “a decolonizing framework”:
anti-colonial critique often celebrates empowered postcolonial subjects who seize denied privileges from the metropole. This anti-to-post-colonial project doesn’t strive to undo colonialism but rather to remake it and subvert it. Seeking stolen resources is entangled with settler colonialism because those resources were nature/Native first, then enlisted into the service of settlement and thus almost impossible to reclaim without re-occupying Native land. Furthermore, the postcolonial pursuit of resources is fundamentally an anthropocentric model, as land, water, air, animals, and plants are never able to become postcolonial; they remain objects to be exploited by the empowered postcolonial subject. (19)
I’m not sure I follow the shift from anti-colonial critique to resource exploitation here, particularly since the rest of the argument in this section of the essay focuses on the inadequacy of multicultural approaches to oppressions, which do not address Indigenous sovereignty or rights. Perhaps the shift to resource exploitation comes from the need for decolonization to include “unsettling/deoccupying the land” (19). Any arguments short of that recognition, they argue, are equivocations: “That is, they ambiguously avoid engaging with settler colonialism; they are ambivalent about minority/people of color/colonized Others as settlers; they are cryptic about Indigenous land rights in spaces inhabited by people of color” (19).
Conscientization, a focus on “decolonizing the mind,” is the fourth move to innocence. Tuck and Yang note that Fanon argues that decolonizing the mind was a first step, not the only or final one. “Yet we wonder whether another settler move to innocence is to focus on decolonizing the mind, or the cultivation of critical consciousness, as if it were the sole activity of decolonization; to allow conscientization to stand in for the more uncomfortable task of relinquishing stolen land,” they write (19). “[T]he front-loading of critical consciousness building can waylay decolonization, even though the experience of teaching and learning to be critical of settler colonialism can be so powerful that it can feel like it is indeed making change,” they continue (19). Decolonization will only happen when “stolen land is relinquished” (19). And yet, isn’t the development of that “critical consciousness” necessary to relinquishing that stolen land? Wouldn’t developing a collective understanding that the land has been stolen and needs to be returned be an essential step in the decolonizing process? Besides, how would that stolen land be relinquished? What would happen afterwards? I realize that Tuck and Yang argue that there is no Settler futurity—that we ought to have no future on the stolen lands we occupy—but that is an extraordinary thing to ask people to accept, especially if they have not yet developed a “critical consciousness” regarding settler colonialism.
Tuck and Yang describe that project of developing critical consciousness as settler harm reduction” (21). This project, they write, “is intended only as a stopgap”:
As the environmental crisis escalates and peoples around the globe are exposed to greater concentrations of violence and poverty, the need for settler harm reduction is acute, profoundly so. At the same time we remember that, by definition, settler harm reduction, like conscientization, is not the same as decolonization and does not inherently offer any pathways that lead to decolonization. (21-22)
All of this would be easier to understand, or perhaps accept, if Tuck and Yang were able to offer concrete examples of pathways that would lead to decolonization, defined as the return of stolen land. How do we get there from here?
The fifth move to innocence, “A(s)t(e)risk peoples,” has to do with the ways that Indigenous people are rendered invisible by social science research, either by being defined as “at risk” peoples, “on the verge of extinction, culturally and economically bereft, engaged or soon-to-be engaged in self-destructive behaviors which can interrupt their school careers and seamless absorption into the economy” (22), or by being left out or “represented by an asterisk” in statistical data sets because of small sample sizes (22). I’m not sure how to respond to this argument. On the one hand, it’s important that Indigenous peoples not be defined only by the social problems caused by colonization, but on the other, it would be foolish to pretend that such problems do not exist. Those self-destructive behaviours don’t just interrupt the “seamless absorption into the economy” of Indigenous youth, for instance; they can end their lives. Yes, becoming part of the economy may not be the resolution Tuck and Yang would like to see for those youth, but it’s better than some of the alternatives, and I don’t think it’s the role of privileged academics to tell people struggling to survive what their goals ought to be. The other problem appears to be without a solution: sample sizes need to be large to be statistically valid, and where a population is small—their example is urban Indigenous youth in schools—it is likely to be submerged in the data. Perhaps the answer would be to engage in more qualitative research than quantitative research, but that’s not where Tuck and Yang end up. Rather, they argue that because most Indigenous youth live in cities, “[a]ny decolonizing urban education endeavor must address the foundations of urban land pedagogy and Indigenous politics vis-a-vis the settler colonial state” (23). That may be true, but it doesn’t address the problem of large-scale population surveys which make “collecting basic education and health information about this small and heterogenous group” so difficult, or how those difficulties can be overcome in order to “counter the disappearance of Indigenous particularities in public policy” (22).
The last move to innocence, “Re-occupation and urban homesteading,” has to do with the failure of the Occupy movement to acknowledge that its occupations took place on stolen land, or that the source of the wealth that Occupy demanded be redistributed was that stolen Indigenous land (23). “For social justice movements, like Occupy, to truly aspire to decolonization non-metaphorically, they would impoverish, not enrich, the 99%+ settler population of [the] United States,” they write. “Decolonization eliminates settler property rights and settler sovereignty. It requires the abolition of land as property and upholds the sovereignty of Native land and people” (26). Again, that would be an extremely difficult proposition to sell to that settler majority. Tuck and Yang compare the Occupy/Decolonize movements to the French and Haitian Revolutions of the late 18th century. They note that Haiti was the richest French colony before its revolution, and the poorest afterwards, due to the French demand for reparations as a condition of recognizing Haitian independence. This comparison is a way of introducing the notion of incommensurability: the Occupy and Decolonize movements are incommensurable, because while Occupy sees the United States as composed of 99% Occupiers (I doubt Occupy ever claimed that 99% of the population was participating in the movement) and 1% Owners, the Decolonize movement sees the primary distinction as between the 0.9% Indigenous peoples and the 99.1% Settlers (27). “Occupation is a move towards innocence that hides behind the numerical superiority of the settler nation, the elision of democracy with justice, and the logic that what became property under the 1% belongs to the other 99%,” they write (28). They also connect Occupy’s demand to “occupy everything” to what they call “urban homesteading,” which I think is another way of thinking about the gentrification of poor neighbourhoods. Surely there is a radical distinction to be made between the Occupy movement and gentrification? Perhaps not. “In contrast to the settler labor of occupying the commons, homesteading, and possession, some scholars have begun to consider the labor of de-occupation in the undercommons, permanent fugitivity, and dispossession as possibilities for a radical black praxis,” they write, citing Fred Moten and Stephano Harney (28). I’ve tried to read Moten’s and Harney’s book The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning and Black Study, but I ran aground on the impossibility of their ideas, and frankly their unappealing nature. Who would want the instability of “permanent fugitivity” or of “dispossession”? Perhaps I need to return to Moten’s and Harney’s work and try harder to understand it. I found this section of the essay to be quite weak, with the excursion into the history of Haiti an unnecessary detour, and I think that Craig Fortier’s book Unsettling the Commons: Social Movements Within, Against, and Beyond Settler Colonialism to be a much clearer discussion of the contradictions between the Occupy movement and decolonization.
The last section of the essay, “Incommensurability is unsettling,” presents
a synopsis of the imbrication of settler colonialism with transnationalist, abolitionist, and critical pedagogy movements—efforts that are often thought of as exempt from Indigenous decolonizing analyses—as a synthesis of how decolonization as material, not metaphor, unsettles the innocence of these movements. These are interruptions which destabilize, un-balance, and repatriate the very terms and assumptions of some of the most radical efforts to reimagine human power relations. We argue that the opportunities for solidarity lie in what is incommensurable rather than what is common across these efforts. (28)
They describe what they call “an ethic of incommensurability, which recognizes what is distinct, what is sovereign for project(s) of decolonization in relation to human and civil rights based social justice projects” (28). There are, they continue, “portions of these project that simply cannot be speak to one another, cannot be aligned or allied” (28). Those portions are incommensurable. They suggest “unsettling themes that challenge the coalescence of social justice endeavors broadly assembled in three areas: Transnational or Third World decolonizations, Abolition, and Critical Space-Place Pedagogies” (28-29). For each area, they provide “a bibliography of incommensurability” (29).
First is the discussion of Third World decolonizations. “The anti-colonial turn towards the transnational can sometimes involve ignoring the settler colonial context where one resides and how that inhabitation is implicated in settler colonialism, in order to establish ‘global’ solidarities that presumably suffer fewer complexities and complications” (29). They invite their readers “to consider the permanent settler war as the theatre for all imperial wars,” and provide a bibliography of texts that address a number of issues, such as “discovery, invasion, occupation and Commons as the claims of settler sovereignty,” “heteropatriarchy as the imposition of settler sexuality,” and “U.S. imperialism as the expansion of settler colonialism” (29).
Second is a discussion of the abolition of slavery. They note that freed slaves in the United States were promised 40 acres of land that belonged to Indigenous peoples as reparations. “[W]e urge you to consider how enslavement is a twofold procedure: removal from land and the creation of property (land and bodies),” they write. “Thus, abolition is likewise twofold, requiring the repatriation of land and the abolition of property (land and bodies). Abolition means self-possession but not object-possession, repatriation but not reparation” (30). I find the word “repatriation” rather ominous here; what of the formerly enslaved Africans in the United States who did not choose to be repatriated? What would happen to them? And why is this discussion of the abolition of slavery, something that happened in 1865, being considered a contemporary issue? I am missing something in this argument.
Third is critical pedagogies, something that engages Tuck and Yang, since they are professors of education. They suggest that place-based, environmentalist, and urban pedagogies are incommensurable with land education, and suggest several resources. So far, though, they have not explained how “opportunities for solidarity lie in what is incommensurable” (28). Perhaps that is the reason they provide a lengthy, italicized explanation of incommensurability. It is, they write, “an acknowledgement that decolonization will require a change in the order of the world” (31):
This is not to say that Indigenous peoples or Black and brown peoples take positions of dominance over white settlers; the goal is not for everyone to merely swap spots on the settler-colonial triad, to take another turn on the merry-go-round. The goal is to break the relentless structuring of the triad—a break and not a compromise. (31)
“There is,” they continue, “so much that in incommensurable, so many overlaps that can’t be figured, that cannot be resolved” (31). From this point the essay becomes a list of those apparently impossible to resolve issues: “Settler colonialism fuels imperialism all around the globe. Oil is the motor and motive for war and so was salt, so will be water. Settler sovereignty over these very pieces of earth, air, and water is what makes possible these imperialisms” (31). What is the connection between settler colonialism and oil? Isn’t settler colonialism a feature of places (I’m thinking of New Zealand) that don’t have oil reserves? Why bring salt into the discussion? Do Settlers have sovereignty over the air? Yes, the uranium mined near the Laguna Pueblo reservation in New Mexico was used to build bombs, and yes, the radioactive debris has poisoned the land, but how is that incommensurable? With what? How are the borders of the U.S. examples of incommensurability? How is the high rate of incarceration in Louisiana an example of incommensurability? There’s no question that prison farms and private prisons are contemporary forms of slavery, but how are they incommensurable? I don’t understand the connections Tuck and Yang are expecting their readers to make; nor do I understand how issues that are impossible to resolve can become the grounds of solidarity. That idea seems to have been dropped entirely.
Finally, Tuck and Yang provide a short conclusion that begins with this statement: “An ethic of incommensurability, which guides moves that unsettle innocence, stands in contrast to aims of reconciliation, which motivate settler moves to innocence” (35). Reconciliation, they continue, “is concerned with rescuing settler normalcy,” and with “rescuing a settler future” (35). Reconciliation asks questions like “what will decolonization look like? What will happen after abolition? What will be the consequences of decolonization for the settler?” (35). “Incommensurability,” Tuck and Yang write, “acknowledges that these questions need not, and perhaps cannot, be answered in order for decolonization to exist as a framework” (35). But won’t decolonization require an engagement with Settlers, given their sheer numbers (which Tuck and Yang have discussed)? How could such an engagement take place without answering those questions, or at least acknowledging that they are legitimate? My questions, however, are the wrong ones to ask, and my suggestion that Settlers need to be engaged is off-topic: “decolonization is not accountable to settlers, or settler futurity,” Tuck and Yang write. “Decolonization is accountable to Indigenous sovereignty and futurity” (35). Moreover, they argue, the answers to the questions Settlers might ask “are not fully in view and can’t be as long as decolonization remains punctuated my metaphor” (35). I’m not sure that argument makes sense; one can imagine giving back stolen land without resorting to metaphor, and the questions Settlers would ask about their future would still exist. The authors’ next point makes more sense: “The answers will not emerge from friendly understanding, and indeed require a dangerous understanding of uncommonality that un-coalesces coalition politics—moves that may feel very unfriendly” (35). The point, I think, is that uncommonality is built into this issue; that decolonization will be a struggle between Indigenous peoples and Settlers, not a coalition that includes both parties. The unfriendliness they acknowledge is simply part of the structure, and the struggle, of decolonization.
“To fully enact an ethic of incommensurability means relinquishing settler futurity, abandoning the hope that settlers may one day be commensurable to Native peoples,” Tuck and Yang write:
It means removing the asterisks, periods, commas, apostrophes, the whereas’s, buts and conditional clauses that punctuate decolonization and underwrite settler innocence. The Native futures, the lives to be lived once the settler nation is gone—these are the unwritten possibilities made possible by an ethic of incommensurability. (36)
“Decolonization is not an ‘and,’” they write, not something that can be made a part of other human or civil rights approaches to justice. “It is an elsewhere” (36).
After reading and summarizing “Decolonization Is Not A Metaphor,” I have mixed feelings. I see the need to give back the stolen land that I—we—live on. I see the moves to innocence that Settlers use to protect themselves from the knowledge that despite their enlightened qualities and their apparent lack of innocence they are actually part of the colonial problem. But I am confused by what Tuck and Yang mean by “an ethic of incommensurability” (36), or how incommensurability can be the grounds of solidarity. It’s just not clear to me. I’m not sure how one can deny anyone anyone’s future, either, although denying settler futurity is not uncommon in texts about settler colonialism, perhaps because this essay has been so influential. (I think denying Indigenous futurity is a crime.) Certainly that’s not a way to get many Settlers onside with the decolonizing project, although perhaps the way this essay begins and ends with Frantz Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth is a clue to what Tuck and Yang mean by decolonization—that, like the anti-colonial revolution in Algeria, it will be a violent struggle in which alliances between Settlers and Indigenous peoples will become null and void. That interpretation, though, runs aground on their apparent insistence that alliances between decolonization and other social-justice movements is possible, apparently through incommensurability. And while I understand their reluctance to offer any pathways towards decolonization—probably because they don’t actually know how it might play out, or how one might begin to set the process of returning land in motion—isn’t it a serious weakness to suggest that conscientization (consciousness raising might be a better word) or gestures towards decolonization are insufficient, without providing any positive alternatives? I don’t think the work of Moten and Harney is likely to lead to workable alternatives; like Tuck and Yang, their thinking is too utopian and not grounded in the unpleasant reality of politics in settler colonial states to be of practical use. I suppose what I ought to do is take what is useful from the essay and leave the rest behind, although some of what I would have to leave behind is frankly baffling. I must be misunderstanding something central to their argument, but I honestly don’t know what it might be. So I’m left confused and frustrated—probably not for the last time, either. Some of the stuff I’m reading is confusing and frustrating. I need to get used to it.
Works Cited
Fortier, Craig. Unsettling the Commons: Social Movements Within, Against, and Beyond Settler Colonialism. ARP Books, 2017
Harney, Stefano, and Fred Moten. The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning and Black Study, Minor Compositions, 2013.
Tuck, Eve, and K. Wayne Yang. “Decolonization Is Not A Metaphor.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, vol. 1, no. 1, 2012, pp. 1-40.