Eating the Heart of Weetigo World: Decolonial Imaginaries in the Stories of Louise Erdrich and Tomson Highway

My dissertation asks what the decolonial possibilities of fiction are in the context of the settler colonial imaginaries particular to the United States and Canada. The ongoing process of settler colonialism demands various forms of conversion from Indigenous people: ecological/land based, religious...

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Main Author: Fullan, Rebecca Lynne
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: CUNY Academic Works 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/4047
https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5112&context=gc_etds
id ftcityunivny:oai:academicworks.cuny.edu:gc_etds-5112
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection City University of New York: CUNY Academic Works
op_collection_id ftcityunivny
language English
topic Louise Erdrich
Tomson Highway
Anishinaabe Literature
Cree Literature
Algonquian Literature
decolonial literature
settler colonialism
United States
Canada
Arts and Humanities
English Language and Literature
Indigenous Studies
Literature in English
North America
Ethnic and Cultural Minority
Race
Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies
Religion
spellingShingle Louise Erdrich
Tomson Highway
Anishinaabe Literature
Cree Literature
Algonquian Literature
decolonial literature
settler colonialism
United States
Canada
Arts and Humanities
English Language and Literature
Indigenous Studies
Literature in English
North America
Ethnic and Cultural Minority
Race
Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies
Religion
Fullan, Rebecca Lynne
Eating the Heart of Weetigo World: Decolonial Imaginaries in the Stories of Louise Erdrich and Tomson Highway
topic_facet Louise Erdrich
Tomson Highway
Anishinaabe Literature
Cree Literature
Algonquian Literature
decolonial literature
settler colonialism
United States
Canada
Arts and Humanities
English Language and Literature
Indigenous Studies
Literature in English
North America
Ethnic and Cultural Minority
Race
Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies
Religion
description My dissertation asks what the decolonial possibilities of fiction are in the context of the settler colonial imaginaries particular to the United States and Canada. The ongoing process of settler colonialism demands various forms of conversion from Indigenous people: ecological/land based, religious, educational, legal, familial, but the construct of “conversion” obscures Indigenous worldviews, and indeed worlds, which function according to different principles. I interpret Erdrich and Highway's work in the context of Anishinaabe and Cree narratives and story-structures. These offer examples of what can constitute broader decolonial imaginaries, through which perception and creation of other, more liveable worlds is possible. Fiction by Indigenous writers, I argue, acts as the expressions and creative tools of worlds that do exist, but, according to the truth-claims of settler colonial ontologies, are disavowed and suppressed. The first chapter exposes weetigo institutions of Euroamerican settler colonialism through analysis of Kiss of the Fur Queen by Tomson Highway and The Round House by Louise Erdrich. Wîhtikowipayi, the process of absorbing, accepting, and enacting cannibalistic appetites, with its gross misrecogition of others and insatiable violent greed, is a conversion demanded and created by settler institutions. The wîhtikowipayi of settler colonial institutions, then, facilitates not just individual persons becoming wîhtikow, but the production of settler colonial society itself as a process of weetigo worlding, which is how I name a the creation and maintenance of an ongoing network of political structures, nations, and epistemologies sustained precisely, if paradoxically, by these self-and-other-destructive greeds. In the second chapter I look at the figure of Jesus and how people relate to him in Erdrich and Highway.In Highway, Jesus’ role as an instrument as well as a victim of violence, as well as the potential grotesquerie of the invitation to be “like” him, is more present than in Erdrich, while in Erdrich the potential variety of Jesus as enfleshed is slippery and startling, always in flux. Since orthodox Christianity assumes an all-encompassing worldview that contains, explains, and ordains all of space and time, literary interactions with Jesus according to radically different terms can make perceptible Indigenous worlds that are not contained by nor comprehensible within settler ontological assumptions. The third chapter explores the how both Highway and Erdrich feature the Eucharist as a model of consumption that both diverges from and intersects with weetigo consumption. The relationship I am tracing centers around Eucharistic miracles: In scenes in Erdrich and Highway’s novels, the bread and wine change into edible meat. In both novels, though in very different ways, the person who experiences the miracle is on a gradual trajectory away from Catholic orthodoxy, and will eventually recognize and celebrate their immersion in Anishinaabe and Cree cosmology, respectively, as more significant than their Catholicism. The fourth chapter looks at Erdrich’s latest novel, Future Home of the Living God, which describes a combined ecological, reproductive, governmental, and evolutionary dystopia. Future Home of the Living God is a narrative of and about inheritances--cyclical, punctuated, eruptive--nested within each other and operating on wildly different scales in terms of space, time, and impact. Future Home demonstrates how settler colonial nations depend upon a cycle of inheritance that is punctuated and eruptive. It halts along in repetitions that are both remarkably consistent in their ideologies and impacts, and remarkably flexible in how those ideologies and impacts are framed. Through the stories of these Indigenous writers, I find a relationship of conversation that is counterposed to the transformative and destructive conversions demanded by Christian rules and by settler colonial institutions and imaginaries. The potential of conversation among incommensurable and disparate worlds that cannot be collapsed together at all without violence, nor fully even with genocidal violence across centuries, is itself small, partial, and particular. These attributes, I claim and hope, also make it potentially powerful, efficacious, and outside of the way coloniality continually frames and thinks about itself, and thus can make perceptible that which always exists outside of that world.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Fullan, Rebecca Lynne
author_facet Fullan, Rebecca Lynne
author_sort Fullan, Rebecca Lynne
title Eating the Heart of Weetigo World: Decolonial Imaginaries in the Stories of Louise Erdrich and Tomson Highway
title_short Eating the Heart of Weetigo World: Decolonial Imaginaries in the Stories of Louise Erdrich and Tomson Highway
title_full Eating the Heart of Weetigo World: Decolonial Imaginaries in the Stories of Louise Erdrich and Tomson Highway
title_fullStr Eating the Heart of Weetigo World: Decolonial Imaginaries in the Stories of Louise Erdrich and Tomson Highway
title_full_unstemmed Eating the Heart of Weetigo World: Decolonial Imaginaries in the Stories of Louise Erdrich and Tomson Highway
title_sort eating the heart of weetigo world: decolonial imaginaries in the stories of louise erdrich and tomson highway
publisher CUNY Academic Works
publishDate 2020
url https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/4047
https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5112&context=gc_etds
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_source Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects
op_relation https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/4047
https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5112&context=gc_etds
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spelling ftcityunivny:oai:academicworks.cuny.edu:gc_etds-5112 2023-05-15T13:28:55+02:00 Eating the Heart of Weetigo World: Decolonial Imaginaries in the Stories of Louise Erdrich and Tomson Highway Fullan, Rebecca Lynne 2020-09-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/4047 https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5112&context=gc_etds English eng CUNY Academic Works https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/4047 https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5112&context=gc_etds Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Louise Erdrich Tomson Highway Anishinaabe Literature Cree Literature Algonquian Literature decolonial literature settler colonialism United States Canada Arts and Humanities English Language and Literature Indigenous Studies Literature in English North America Ethnic and Cultural Minority Race Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies Religion dissertation 2020 ftcityunivny 2021-09-18T22:16:33Z My dissertation asks what the decolonial possibilities of fiction are in the context of the settler colonial imaginaries particular to the United States and Canada. The ongoing process of settler colonialism demands various forms of conversion from Indigenous people: ecological/land based, religious, educational, legal, familial, but the construct of “conversion” obscures Indigenous worldviews, and indeed worlds, which function according to different principles. I interpret Erdrich and Highway's work in the context of Anishinaabe and Cree narratives and story-structures. These offer examples of what can constitute broader decolonial imaginaries, through which perception and creation of other, more liveable worlds is possible. Fiction by Indigenous writers, I argue, acts as the expressions and creative tools of worlds that do exist, but, according to the truth-claims of settler colonial ontologies, are disavowed and suppressed. The first chapter exposes weetigo institutions of Euroamerican settler colonialism through analysis of Kiss of the Fur Queen by Tomson Highway and The Round House by Louise Erdrich. Wîhtikowipayi, the process of absorbing, accepting, and enacting cannibalistic appetites, with its gross misrecogition of others and insatiable violent greed, is a conversion demanded and created by settler institutions. The wîhtikowipayi of settler colonial institutions, then, facilitates not just individual persons becoming wîhtikow, but the production of settler colonial society itself as a process of weetigo worlding, which is how I name a the creation and maintenance of an ongoing network of political structures, nations, and epistemologies sustained precisely, if paradoxically, by these self-and-other-destructive greeds. In the second chapter I look at the figure of Jesus and how people relate to him in Erdrich and Highway.In Highway, Jesus’ role as an instrument as well as a victim of violence, as well as the potential grotesquerie of the invitation to be “like” him, is more present than in Erdrich, while in Erdrich the potential variety of Jesus as enfleshed is slippery and startling, always in flux. Since orthodox Christianity assumes an all-encompassing worldview that contains, explains, and ordains all of space and time, literary interactions with Jesus according to radically different terms can make perceptible Indigenous worlds that are not contained by nor comprehensible within settler ontological assumptions. The third chapter explores the how both Highway and Erdrich feature the Eucharist as a model of consumption that both diverges from and intersects with weetigo consumption. The relationship I am tracing centers around Eucharistic miracles: In scenes in Erdrich and Highway’s novels, the bread and wine change into edible meat. In both novels, though in very different ways, the person who experiences the miracle is on a gradual trajectory away from Catholic orthodoxy, and will eventually recognize and celebrate their immersion in Anishinaabe and Cree cosmology, respectively, as more significant than their Catholicism. The fourth chapter looks at Erdrich’s latest novel, Future Home of the Living God, which describes a combined ecological, reproductive, governmental, and evolutionary dystopia. Future Home of the Living God is a narrative of and about inheritances--cyclical, punctuated, eruptive--nested within each other and operating on wildly different scales in terms of space, time, and impact. Future Home demonstrates how settler colonial nations depend upon a cycle of inheritance that is punctuated and eruptive. It halts along in repetitions that are both remarkably consistent in their ideologies and impacts, and remarkably flexible in how those ideologies and impacts are framed. Through the stories of these Indigenous writers, I find a relationship of conversation that is counterposed to the transformative and destructive conversions demanded by Christian rules and by settler colonial institutions and imaginaries. The potential of conversation among incommensurable and disparate worlds that cannot be collapsed together at all without violence, nor fully even with genocidal violence across centuries, is itself small, partial, and particular. These attributes, I claim and hope, also make it potentially powerful, efficacious, and outside of the way coloniality continually frames and thinks about itself, and thus can make perceptible that which always exists outside of that world. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis anishina* City University of New York: CUNY Academic Works Canada