Reconciliation & Indigenous Inclusion In Ontario's Wilderness: An Analysis of Recreational Space in Temagami - n'Daki Menan

The Temagami wilderness that we know today is the result of both a cultural and natural phenomenon; the result of a struggle over meaning, identity and land. This paper explores how histories and cultures are reflected in the physical and social landscape of recreational space in Ontario. The primar...

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Main Author: Lara Hintelmann (10854675)
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.32920/ryerson.14652399.v1
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spelling ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/14652399 2023-05-15T16:15:38+02:00 Reconciliation & Indigenous Inclusion In Ontario's Wilderness: An Analysis of Recreational Space in Temagami - n'Daki Menan Lara Hintelmann (10854675) 2021-05-25T07:15:21Z https://doi.org/10.32920/ryerson.14652399.v1 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Reconciliation_Indigenous_Inclusion_In_Ontario_s_Wilderness_An_Analysis_of_Recreational_Space_in_Temagami_-_n_Daki_Menan/14652399 doi:10.32920/ryerson.14652399.v1 In Copyright Uncategorized content Reconciliation Aboriginal title -- Ontario -- Temagami Lake Region Native peoples -- Land tenure -- Temagami Text Thesis 2021 ftsmithonian https://doi.org/10.32920/ryerson.14652399.v1 2021-06-13T15:58:36Z The Temagami wilderness that we know today is the result of both a cultural and natural phenomenon; the result of a struggle over meaning, identity and land. This paper explores how histories and cultures are reflected in the physical and social landscape of recreational space in Ontario. The primary research question surrounds who has access to Temagami and whose voices are represented. The focus is largely on First Nations visibility and inclusion in Temagami, navigating land use tensions between recreational users, resource extraction, and the Teme-Augama Anishnabai. Merging discourse on wilderness as Canadian identity, settler colonialism, and decolonization, this paper explores the contested nature of the wilderness and identifies opportunities for coexistence and a shared future of mutual respect. This research will contribute to our understanding of cottage country - a unique Ontario identity - reflecting on how First Nations’ identity and values can be represented equally alongside settler society. The goal of this work is to contribute to the discussion on opportunities for decolonization of our wilderness landscapes. Thesis First Nations Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftsmithonian
language unknown
topic Uncategorized content
Reconciliation
Aboriginal title -- Ontario -- Temagami
Lake
Region
Native peoples -- Land tenure -- Temagami
spellingShingle Uncategorized content
Reconciliation
Aboriginal title -- Ontario -- Temagami
Lake
Region
Native peoples -- Land tenure -- Temagami
Lara Hintelmann (10854675)
Reconciliation & Indigenous Inclusion In Ontario's Wilderness: An Analysis of Recreational Space in Temagami - n'Daki Menan
topic_facet Uncategorized content
Reconciliation
Aboriginal title -- Ontario -- Temagami
Lake
Region
Native peoples -- Land tenure -- Temagami
description The Temagami wilderness that we know today is the result of both a cultural and natural phenomenon; the result of a struggle over meaning, identity and land. This paper explores how histories and cultures are reflected in the physical and social landscape of recreational space in Ontario. The primary research question surrounds who has access to Temagami and whose voices are represented. The focus is largely on First Nations visibility and inclusion in Temagami, navigating land use tensions between recreational users, resource extraction, and the Teme-Augama Anishnabai. Merging discourse on wilderness as Canadian identity, settler colonialism, and decolonization, this paper explores the contested nature of the wilderness and identifies opportunities for coexistence and a shared future of mutual respect. This research will contribute to our understanding of cottage country - a unique Ontario identity - reflecting on how First Nations’ identity and values can be represented equally alongside settler society. The goal of this work is to contribute to the discussion on opportunities for decolonization of our wilderness landscapes.
format Thesis
author Lara Hintelmann (10854675)
author_facet Lara Hintelmann (10854675)
author_sort Lara Hintelmann (10854675)
title Reconciliation & Indigenous Inclusion In Ontario's Wilderness: An Analysis of Recreational Space in Temagami - n'Daki Menan
title_short Reconciliation & Indigenous Inclusion In Ontario's Wilderness: An Analysis of Recreational Space in Temagami - n'Daki Menan
title_full Reconciliation & Indigenous Inclusion In Ontario's Wilderness: An Analysis of Recreational Space in Temagami - n'Daki Menan
title_fullStr Reconciliation & Indigenous Inclusion In Ontario's Wilderness: An Analysis of Recreational Space in Temagami - n'Daki Menan
title_full_unstemmed Reconciliation & Indigenous Inclusion In Ontario's Wilderness: An Analysis of Recreational Space in Temagami - n'Daki Menan
title_sort reconciliation & indigenous inclusion in ontario's wilderness: an analysis of recreational space in temagami - n'daki menan
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.32920/ryerson.14652399.v1
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Reconciliation_Indigenous_Inclusion_In_Ontario_s_Wilderness_An_Analysis_of_Recreational_Space_in_Temagami_-_n_Daki_Menan/14652399
doi:10.32920/ryerson.14652399.v1
op_rights In Copyright
op_doi https://doi.org/10.32920/ryerson.14652399.v1
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