Participatory Video: One Contemporary Way for Cree and Inuit Adolescents to Relate to the Land in Nunavik

Indigenous peoples in Canada’s North, especially youth, are increasingly using creative visual arts, such as film, video, and new media technologies to portray their own realities and their personal view of the surrounding environment, thereby contesting colonial, stereotyped media representations o...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:ARCTIC
Main Authors: Herrmann, Thora M., Chanteloup, Laine, Joliet, Fabienne
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: The Arctic Institute of North America 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.14430/arctic77586
https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/download/77586/56897
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Summary:Indigenous peoples in Canada’s North, especially youth, are increasingly using creative visual arts, such as film, video, and new media technologies to portray their own realities and their personal view of the surrounding environment, thereby contesting colonial, stereotyped media representations of First Peoples. To analyze the youth geography—a sub-discipline of human geography—of nuna (“land” in Inuktitut) and istchee (“land” in Cree) and to understand the distinctive and contemporary meanings that Inuit and Cree young people give to the land, we carried out participatory video (PV) workshops in three Inuit and one Cree communities in Nunavik in 2016, 2017, and 2019. In this paper, we give an account of the nuna/istchee PV project as a method for engaging with young Indigenous people, as a means to develop an Indigenous youth cultural geography in the Arctic. We discuss the effects of PV on the different actors involved in the research process: young Inuit and Cree participants and their communities, the participating schools, and researchers.