This article examines the representation of settlement in Canada in the wake of Idle No More in recent Anglo-Canadian literature. It argues that Idle No More engendered a new vocabulary for settler-invader citizens to position themselves in relation to this Indigenous movement, with non-Indigenous Canadians self-identifying as “settlers” and “allies” as a means of both orienting themselves with respect to Indigenous resistance to the settler-invader nation-state and signalling an attempted solidarity with Idle No More that would not lapse into appropriation. Four very different poetic texts by non-Indigenous authors demonstrate this reconsideration of settlement in the wake of Idle No More: Arleen Paré’s Lake of Two Mountains (2014); Rachel...
This dissertation examined how the Idle No More movement, particularly during the peak of Indigenous...
Focusing on southern Alberta, my paper discusses the power of settler life writing to replace Indig...
[First paragraph] Reading Indigenous poets such as Joséphine Bacon (Innu) and Jean Sioui (Wendat), o...
Idle No More, a recent protest movement initiated to draw attention to concerns by Indigenous people...
This study attempts to reach toward a critical understanding of selected contemporary Native Canadia...
Recently, a new body of scholarship on “settler colonialism” has emerged with the goal to analyze th...
Idle No More, a recent protest movement initiated to draw attention to concerns by Indigenous people...
Canadian poet Angela Rawlings’s Wide Slumber for Lepidopterists (2006) raises questions about the vi...
An examination of Canada’s unsettled relations with its Arctic territories, this essay contends that...
This paper discusses the ways recent texts by two Indigenous Canadian writers, Jordan Abel’s collect...
This paper considers the work of poets who travel from the area of the Indigenous land of Turtle Isl...
This article explores selected poems from Dumont’s A Really Good Brown Girl and The Pemmican Eaters ...
This chapter explores apparent Inuit ambiguity towards Idle No More. The Indigenous movement was fou...
Canada is widely regarded as a liberal, multicultural nation that prides itself on a history of pea...
Idle No More, a recent protest movement initiated to draw attention to concerns by Indigenous people...
This dissertation examined how the Idle No More movement, particularly during the peak of Indigenous...
Focusing on southern Alberta, my paper discusses the power of settler life writing to replace Indig...
[First paragraph] Reading Indigenous poets such as Joséphine Bacon (Innu) and Jean Sioui (Wendat), o...
Idle No More, a recent protest movement initiated to draw attention to concerns by Indigenous people...
This study attempts to reach toward a critical understanding of selected contemporary Native Canadia...
Recently, a new body of scholarship on “settler colonialism” has emerged with the goal to analyze th...
Idle No More, a recent protest movement initiated to draw attention to concerns by Indigenous people...
Canadian poet Angela Rawlings’s Wide Slumber for Lepidopterists (2006) raises questions about the vi...
An examination of Canada’s unsettled relations with its Arctic territories, this essay contends that...
This paper discusses the ways recent texts by two Indigenous Canadian writers, Jordan Abel’s collect...
This paper considers the work of poets who travel from the area of the Indigenous land of Turtle Isl...
This article explores selected poems from Dumont’s A Really Good Brown Girl and The Pemmican Eaters ...
This chapter explores apparent Inuit ambiguity towards Idle No More. The Indigenous movement was fou...
Canada is widely regarded as a liberal, multicultural nation that prides itself on a history of pea...
Idle No More, a recent protest movement initiated to draw attention to concerns by Indigenous people...
This dissertation examined how the Idle No More movement, particularly during the peak of Indigenous...
Focusing on southern Alberta, my paper discusses the power of settler life writing to replace Indig...
[First paragraph] Reading Indigenous poets such as Joséphine Bacon (Innu) and Jean Sioui (Wendat), o...