Of bison bones and fine China : a vegan approach to genocide on the Plains

The digital prose-poem, “Bone China” (2015), by Canadian First Nations writer Paul Seesequasis responds to three historical photographs from the Saskatoon Public Library Archives (dated 1878, 1890, 1891) that depict towering stacks of bison bones, waiting to be shipped for industrial processing into...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Madsen, Deborah Lea
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:168235
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author Madsen, Deborah Lea
author_facet Madsen, Deborah Lea
author_sort Madsen, Deborah Lea
collection Unknown
description The digital prose-poem, “Bone China” (2015), by Canadian First Nations writer Paul Seesequasis responds to three historical photographs from the Saskatoon Public Library Archives (dated 1878, 1890, 1891) that depict towering stacks of bison bones, waiting to be shipped for industrial processing into products that included fine bone chinaware. Reading Seesequasis' poetic chinaware intersectionally, from an ethical vegan perspective, exposes the multiple metonymic significances of the late nineteenth-century bison Holocaust or “animal genocide” described by Anishinaabe theorist Gerald Vizenor. The mass slaughter of the bison not only brought Plains nations into submission to the US settler-colonial state but the physical elimination of Native presence (both human and other-than-human) worked to legitimize westward territorial expansion. Not even bones remained as the literal sign of prior occupation; settler pioneers, following the hunters and skinners, collected bison bones to sell for industrial purposes such as the production of bone china in the potteries of Staffordshire and elsewhere. This presentation contextualizes the intersectionality of Paul Seesequasis' poem via the human-animal discourses of films such as Dances with Wolves (1990) and Avatar (2009), and the video game Red Dead Redemption , to uncover the speciesist “human exceptionalism” that grounds the ideology of Manifest Destiny, the ongoing processes of settler colonization, and the commercial interests it continues to serve.
format Conference Object
genre anishina*
First Nations
genre_facet anishina*
First Nations
geographic Slaughter
geographic_facet Slaughter
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language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(-85.633,-85.633,-78.617,-78.617)
op_collection_id ftunivgeneve
op_relation unige:168235
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_source 67th annual British Association for American Studies conference, (2023) p. 19
publishDate 2023
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spelling ftunivgeneve:oai:unige.ch:aou:unige:168235 2025-06-15T14:07:26+00:00 Of bison bones and fine China : a vegan approach to genocide on the Plains Madsen, Deborah Lea 2023 https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:168235 eng eng unige:168235 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess 67th annual British Association for American Studies conference, (2023) p. 19 info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/420/820 Ethical veganism Intersectionality Bison Buffalo Indigeneity Animal genocide info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject ConferencePaper Présentation / Intervention 2023 ftunivgeneve 2025-05-23T07:13:46Z The digital prose-poem, “Bone China” (2015), by Canadian First Nations writer Paul Seesequasis responds to three historical photographs from the Saskatoon Public Library Archives (dated 1878, 1890, 1891) that depict towering stacks of bison bones, waiting to be shipped for industrial processing into products that included fine bone chinaware. Reading Seesequasis' poetic chinaware intersectionally, from an ethical vegan perspective, exposes the multiple metonymic significances of the late nineteenth-century bison Holocaust or “animal genocide” described by Anishinaabe theorist Gerald Vizenor. The mass slaughter of the bison not only brought Plains nations into submission to the US settler-colonial state but the physical elimination of Native presence (both human and other-than-human) worked to legitimize westward territorial expansion. Not even bones remained as the literal sign of prior occupation; settler pioneers, following the hunters and skinners, collected bison bones to sell for industrial purposes such as the production of bone china in the potteries of Staffordshire and elsewhere. This presentation contextualizes the intersectionality of Paul Seesequasis' poem via the human-animal discourses of films such as Dances with Wolves (1990) and Avatar (2009), and the video game Red Dead Redemption , to uncover the speciesist “human exceptionalism” that grounds the ideology of Manifest Destiny, the ongoing processes of settler colonization, and the commercial interests it continues to serve. Conference Object anishina* First Nations Unknown Slaughter ENVELOPE(-85.633,-85.633,-78.617,-78.617)
spellingShingle info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/420/820
Ethical veganism
Intersectionality
Bison
Buffalo
Indigeneity
Animal genocide
Madsen, Deborah Lea
Of bison bones and fine China : a vegan approach to genocide on the Plains
title Of bison bones and fine China : a vegan approach to genocide on the Plains
title_full Of bison bones and fine China : a vegan approach to genocide on the Plains
title_fullStr Of bison bones and fine China : a vegan approach to genocide on the Plains
title_full_unstemmed Of bison bones and fine China : a vegan approach to genocide on the Plains
title_short Of bison bones and fine China : a vegan approach to genocide on the Plains
title_sort of bison bones and fine china : a vegan approach to genocide on the plains
topic info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/420/820
Ethical veganism
Intersectionality
Bison
Buffalo
Indigeneity
Animal genocide
topic_facet info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/420/820
Ethical veganism
Intersectionality
Bison
Buffalo
Indigeneity
Animal genocide
url https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:168235