in a good way: (Re)grounding Contextual Narratives on Turtle Island

Canada is a settler-colonial nation built on Indigenous lands. Architecture in this context is not a neutral practice. Together with urban planning, it has played a key role in the genocidal dispossession, displacement, and assimilation of Indigenous peoples by imposing private property, Euro-Wester...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lalor, Amina
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Waterloo 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/16066
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author Lalor, Amina
author_facet Lalor, Amina
author_sort Lalor, Amina
collection University of Waterloo, Canada: Institutional Repository
description Canada is a settler-colonial nation built on Indigenous lands. Architecture in this context is not a neutral practice. Together with urban planning, it has played a key role in the genocidal dispossession, displacement, and assimilation of Indigenous peoples by imposing private property, Euro-Western settlement, and exploitative land development. The architectural industry across Turtle Island (North America) unfolds within discriminatory, imperialist, and capitalist power structures. It remains complicit in ongoing colonial violence towards Indigenous peoples, and the land upon which we all depend. This thesis documents the process of unsettling and (re)grounding the contextual narratives that frame my work as a Métis-Irish-Vietnamese designer in Southern Ontario on the ancestral lands of the Chonnonton (Neutral/Attawandaron), the Anishinaabeg (Ojibwe/Mississaugas), and the Haudenosaunee (Six Nations/Iroquois) peoples. Within this work I broaden the concept of an architectural “site analysis” to include a deeper context of settler colonialism, Indigenous resistance, and the experiences I carry with me as a designer and a human being. How do we, as architects, reconcile our practice within a settler-colonial context violently inscribed onto Indigenous lands? How do we confront our complicity in Indigenous erasure and honour the treaties and kinship networks that underlie our presence on this ground? Amid an escalating climate crisis, and acknowledging architecture as a land-based practice, how do we mend our relationships with the land, water, plants, and animals? Through reflections, essays, photographs, and illustrations, I map the journey of recalibrating my own relationships to place, in search of what it means to design and build in "a good way."
format Master Thesis
genre anishina*
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geographic Canada
Turtle Island
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Turtle Island
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spelling ftunivwaterloo:oai:uwspace.uwaterloo.ca:10012/16066 2025-01-16T18:58:57+00:00 in a good way: (Re)grounding Contextual Narratives on Turtle Island Lalor, Amina 2020-06-16 http://hdl.handle.net/10012/16066 en eng University of Waterloo http://hdl.handle.net/10012/16066 decolonizing architecture decolonization architectural site analysis reconciliation land-based land-based architecture biskaabiyang Indigenization Indigeneity and architecture Indigenous contexts settler colonialism settler-colonial architecture settler-colonial violence architecture on Turtle Island architecture in Canada architecture in North America decolonizing spatial design Indigenous architecture Métis architecture Master Thesis 2020 ftunivwaterloo 2022-06-18T23:02:55Z Canada is a settler-colonial nation built on Indigenous lands. Architecture in this context is not a neutral practice. Together with urban planning, it has played a key role in the genocidal dispossession, displacement, and assimilation of Indigenous peoples by imposing private property, Euro-Western settlement, and exploitative land development. The architectural industry across Turtle Island (North America) unfolds within discriminatory, imperialist, and capitalist power structures. It remains complicit in ongoing colonial violence towards Indigenous peoples, and the land upon which we all depend. This thesis documents the process of unsettling and (re)grounding the contextual narratives that frame my work as a Métis-Irish-Vietnamese designer in Southern Ontario on the ancestral lands of the Chonnonton (Neutral/Attawandaron), the Anishinaabeg (Ojibwe/Mississaugas), and the Haudenosaunee (Six Nations/Iroquois) peoples. Within this work I broaden the concept of an architectural “site analysis” to include a deeper context of settler colonialism, Indigenous resistance, and the experiences I carry with me as a designer and a human being. How do we, as architects, reconcile our practice within a settler-colonial context violently inscribed onto Indigenous lands? How do we confront our complicity in Indigenous erasure and honour the treaties and kinship networks that underlie our presence on this ground? Amid an escalating climate crisis, and acknowledging architecture as a land-based practice, how do we mend our relationships with the land, water, plants, and animals? Through reflections, essays, photographs, and illustrations, I map the journey of recalibrating my own relationships to place, in search of what it means to design and build in "a good way." Master Thesis anishina* University of Waterloo, Canada: Institutional Repository Canada Turtle Island ENVELOPE(-65.845,-65.845,-66.061,-66.061)
spellingShingle decolonizing architecture
decolonization
architectural site analysis
reconciliation
land-based
land-based architecture
biskaabiyang
Indigenization
Indigeneity and architecture
Indigenous contexts
settler colonialism
settler-colonial architecture
settler-colonial violence
architecture on Turtle Island
architecture in Canada
architecture in North America
decolonizing spatial design
Indigenous architecture
Métis architecture
Lalor, Amina
in a good way: (Re)grounding Contextual Narratives on Turtle Island
title in a good way: (Re)grounding Contextual Narratives on Turtle Island
title_full in a good way: (Re)grounding Contextual Narratives on Turtle Island
title_fullStr in a good way: (Re)grounding Contextual Narratives on Turtle Island
title_full_unstemmed in a good way: (Re)grounding Contextual Narratives on Turtle Island
title_short in a good way: (Re)grounding Contextual Narratives on Turtle Island
title_sort in a good way: (re)grounding contextual narratives on turtle island
topic decolonizing architecture
decolonization
architectural site analysis
reconciliation
land-based
land-based architecture
biskaabiyang
Indigenization
Indigeneity and architecture
Indigenous contexts
settler colonialism
settler-colonial architecture
settler-colonial violence
architecture on Turtle Island
architecture in Canada
architecture in North America
decolonizing spatial design
Indigenous architecture
Métis architecture
topic_facet decolonizing architecture
decolonization
architectural site analysis
reconciliation
land-based
land-based architecture
biskaabiyang
Indigenization
Indigeneity and architecture
Indigenous contexts
settler colonialism
settler-colonial architecture
settler-colonial violence
architecture on Turtle Island
architecture in Canada
architecture in North America
decolonizing spatial design
Indigenous architecture
Métis architecture
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/16066