An edition of Cultivating Canada (2011)

Cultivating Canada

reconciliation through the lens of cultural diversity

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March 2, 2018 | History
An edition of Cultivating Canada (2011)

Cultivating Canada

reconciliation through the lens of cultural diversity

  • 0 Ratings
  • 1 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

The third in a three-volume series addressing the complex notion of reconciliation in a national landscape. The Aboriginal Healing Foundation brings together disparate voices to address how communities -- immigrant, racialized, 'new' Canadians and other minoritized groups relate to the intricacies of reconciliation as a concept. Many of the contributers address questions of land, Aboriginal histories, and different trajectories that have led to the current configuration and conglomeration of peoples in this geographic space. And, a central organizing principle of this collection is artistic practice, of specifically in how embedding creative acts within critical responses helps to create a relevant framework of possibilities as we move inexorably into uncertain futures."--Back cover.

"This third volume is populated by the perspectives of new Canadians and those outside the traditional settler communities of British and French. Because Canada is a nation of diverse cultures, its people drawn from every region of the world, any discussion of reconciliation must include the perspectives of those who have arrived in more recent days and those who trace their family histories beyond western European colonial states. The reason for this is simple. Aboriginal people have a unique historical relationship with the Crown, and the Crown represents all Canadians. From this it follows that all Canadians are treaty people, bearing the responsibilities of Crown commitments and enjoying the rights and benefits of being Canadian.

From this simple principle we proceed to much complexity. The subjects of historical wrongdoings and redress, healing, and reconciliation have many localized variants, among them the internment of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War and the demolition of Africville in the 1960s, for examples. Those who have arrived in Canada from places of colonization, war, genocide, and devastation will very likely have valuable insights into historical trauma; their perspectives should be considered also."--Introduction.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
453

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Cultivating Canada
Cultivating Canada: reconciliation through the lens of cultural diversity
2011, Aboriginal Healing Foundation
in English

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Ramblings and resistances -- Shirley Bear
Napa North -- Henry Tsang and Glen Lowry
Land project : a conversation between Canada and Israel/Palestine -- Cheryl L'Hirondelle, Joseph Naytowhow, b.h. Yael
"On loan" : thoughts on stolen strength, seeds of lubestrok, seeds of truth, seeds of reconciliation -- Sandra Semchuk (with James Nicholas) and Elwood Jimmy
Reconciling with the people and the land? -- Dorothy Christian
What would restitution and regeneration look like from the point of view of water? -- Rita Wong
Stories from the little black school house -- Sylvia D. Hamilton
Beyond imaginings : photography from the Greenbelt -- Meera Margaret Singh
Parallel histories -- Jamelie Hassan and Miriam Jordan
Cross racial encounters and juridical truths : (dis)aggregating race in British Columbia's Contact Zone -- Renisa Mawani
Arctic Bayanihan -- Rhose Harris-Galia
Aiyah! : a little rouse of time and space -- Sid Chow Tan
The attempted genocide and ethnocide of the Roma -- Ronald Lee
Decolonizing anti-racism -- Bonita Lawrence and Enakshi Dua
People of colour in treaty -- Robinder Kaur Sehdev
Learning through crossing lines : an intercultural dialogue -- Srimoyee Mitra
Are people of colour settlers too? -- Malissa Phung
Nurturing dialogues between First Nations, urban Aboriginal, and immigrant communities in Vancouver -- Henry Yu
By turns poetic : redress as transformation -- Roy Miki
Exploring non-Aboriginal attitudes towards reconciliation in Canada : the beginnings of targeted focus group research -- Ravi de Costa and Tom Clark
Into the ranks of man : vicious modernism and the politics of reconciliation -- Rinaldo Walcott
A sorry state -- Mitch Miyagawa
Engendering audience responsibility : the work of Jayce Salloum "in affinity with" -- Jen Budney and Jayce Salloum
Slavery endangers the masters' health : but please don't shoot the messenger -- Rita Shelton Deverell
"Indigenous Blacks" : an irreconcilable identity? -- George Elliott Clarke
Girl : an aesthetic amalgamation -- Diyan Achjadi
Memoryscapes of postwar British Columbia : a look of recognition -- Kirsten Emiko McAllister
Conclusion : the way forward -- Mike DeGagné and Jonathan Dewar.

Edition Notes

Issued also in French under title: Cultiver le Canada : réconciliation sous l'éclairage de la diversité.

"The third in a three-volume series addressing the complex notion of reconciliation in a national landscape"--Page 4 of cover.

Includes bibliographical references.

Issued also in electronic format.

Published in
Ottawa
Series
Aboriginal Healing Foundation research series, Truth and reconciliation -- v. 3, Aboriginal Healing Foundation research series
Other Titles
Translated as: Cultiver le Canada.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
305.8
Library of Congress
E96.5 .C843 2011, HM1271 C85 2011

The Physical Object

Pagination
x, 453 pages :
Number of pages
453

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL26431690M
Internet Archive
cultivatingcanad0000math
ISBN 10
1897285981, 189728599X
ISBN 13
9781897285985, 9781897285992
OCLC/WorldCat
710819196

Source records

Internet Archive item record

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