Burial Places, White Supremacy, and Racial Necrogeographies in Eastern North America

This dissertation examines how the places inhabited by the racialized dead have been destroyed or disallowed in regimes of racialization and colonization in the territories of the Saugeen Anishinaabeg (an area colonially known as Bruce and Grey Counties, Ontario) and throughout eastern North America...

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Main Author: Felepchuk, William Leonard
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://curve.carleton.ca/255a8526-b5a9-4966-be6d-18fa182dd6e9
https://doi.org/10.22215/etd/2022-14965
https://ocul-crl.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01OCUL_CRL/j2o5om/alma991022997631605153
id ftcarletonuniv:oai:curve.carleton.ca:40467
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spelling ftcarletonuniv:oai:curve.carleton.ca:40467 2023-05-15T13:28:35+02:00 Burial Places, White Supremacy, and Racial Necrogeographies in Eastern North America Felepchuk, William Leonard 2022 https://curve.carleton.ca/255a8526-b5a9-4966-be6d-18fa182dd6e9 https://doi.org/10.22215/etd/2022-14965 https://ocul-crl.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01OCUL_CRL/j2o5om/alma991022997631605153 unknown https://curve.carleton.ca/255a8526-b5a9-4966-be6d-18fa182dd6e9 https://doi.org/10.22215/etd/2022-14965 https://ocul-crl.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01OCUL_CRL/j2o5om/alma991022997631605153 Thesis/Dissertation 2022 ftcarletonuniv https://doi.org/10.22215/etd/2022-14965 2022-07-30T23:05:15Z This dissertation examines how the places inhabited by the racialized dead have been destroyed or disallowed in regimes of racialization and colonization in the territories of the Saugeen Anishinaabeg (an area colonially known as Bruce and Grey Counties, Ontario) and throughout eastern North America. I include the burial places of four interconnected peoples: Anishinaabeg of the Great Lakes region, Black communities in Ontario and the Mid-Atlantic, Protestant English-speaking white populations of Ontario and the eastern United States, and Muslim communities who may be part of the three preceding groups, but who also comprise large numbers of more recent migrants to eastern North America. This dissertation maps a variety of case studies across these communities, while remaining centred on the Anishinaabe world. I chronicle how white people have engaged in patterns of desecration and destruction of the burial places of Indigenous and Black communities and resisted efforts by Muslims to establish space to bury their dead. White people have thus maintained the landscape of whiteness both through the destruction of existing graves and the denial of new ones. I argue first that processes of racial dehumanization and colonial dispossession have not only been inflicted on the living but also the dead and the sites they inhabit, and that this violence has its roots in traditions of posthumous dehumanization that are part of British/North American Protestant cultures while also, paradoxically, being deeply at odds with this culture's worldviews about the dead and the respect owed to them. Second, I argue that processes of colonial dispossession rooted in the removal of peoples from their lands extend to the grave itself, and that the grave is a symbol of power over a place. Thirdly, I argue that there is a wide pattern of burial place destruction across eastern North America. Finally, I highlight the profound and magnified importance of these sites to Indigenous, Black, and Muslim communities, as evidenced by both ... Thesis anishina* CURVE - Carleton University Research Virtual Environment
institution Open Polar
collection CURVE - Carleton University Research Virtual Environment
op_collection_id ftcarletonuniv
language unknown
description This dissertation examines how the places inhabited by the racialized dead have been destroyed or disallowed in regimes of racialization and colonization in the territories of the Saugeen Anishinaabeg (an area colonially known as Bruce and Grey Counties, Ontario) and throughout eastern North America. I include the burial places of four interconnected peoples: Anishinaabeg of the Great Lakes region, Black communities in Ontario and the Mid-Atlantic, Protestant English-speaking white populations of Ontario and the eastern United States, and Muslim communities who may be part of the three preceding groups, but who also comprise large numbers of more recent migrants to eastern North America. This dissertation maps a variety of case studies across these communities, while remaining centred on the Anishinaabe world. I chronicle how white people have engaged in patterns of desecration and destruction of the burial places of Indigenous and Black communities and resisted efforts by Muslims to establish space to bury their dead. White people have thus maintained the landscape of whiteness both through the destruction of existing graves and the denial of new ones. I argue first that processes of racial dehumanization and colonial dispossession have not only been inflicted on the living but also the dead and the sites they inhabit, and that this violence has its roots in traditions of posthumous dehumanization that are part of British/North American Protestant cultures while also, paradoxically, being deeply at odds with this culture's worldviews about the dead and the respect owed to them. Second, I argue that processes of colonial dispossession rooted in the removal of peoples from their lands extend to the grave itself, and that the grave is a symbol of power over a place. Thirdly, I argue that there is a wide pattern of burial place destruction across eastern North America. Finally, I highlight the profound and magnified importance of these sites to Indigenous, Black, and Muslim communities, as evidenced by both ...
format Thesis
author Felepchuk, William Leonard
spellingShingle Felepchuk, William Leonard
Burial Places, White Supremacy, and Racial Necrogeographies in Eastern North America
author_facet Felepchuk, William Leonard
author_sort Felepchuk, William Leonard
title Burial Places, White Supremacy, and Racial Necrogeographies in Eastern North America
title_short Burial Places, White Supremacy, and Racial Necrogeographies in Eastern North America
title_full Burial Places, White Supremacy, and Racial Necrogeographies in Eastern North America
title_fullStr Burial Places, White Supremacy, and Racial Necrogeographies in Eastern North America
title_full_unstemmed Burial Places, White Supremacy, and Racial Necrogeographies in Eastern North America
title_sort burial places, white supremacy, and racial necrogeographies in eastern north america
publishDate 2022
url https://curve.carleton.ca/255a8526-b5a9-4966-be6d-18fa182dd6e9
https://doi.org/10.22215/etd/2022-14965
https://ocul-crl.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01OCUL_CRL/j2o5om/alma991022997631605153
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_relation https://curve.carleton.ca/255a8526-b5a9-4966-be6d-18fa182dd6e9
https://doi.org/10.22215/etd/2022-14965
https://ocul-crl.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01OCUL_CRL/j2o5om/alma991022997631605153
op_doi https://doi.org/10.22215/etd/2022-14965
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