The Skullcracker Suit Pt.1:BC Time-slip (The Empire Never Ended)

The Skullcracker Suite (June 2016 - October 2020) is an arts research project engaging the process of decolonization in British Columbia from ethnographic and science fictional perspectives. Named after Hox’hok, the giant man-eating crane of Kwakwaka’wakw legend, the project was conceived as a theat...

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Main Author: Cussans, John
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: University of Worcester 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.worc.ac.uk/10331/
https://eprints.worc.ac.uk/10331/1/Cussans_02%20.pdf
https://issuu.com/uwuoa322021/docs/cussans_02
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spelling ftunivworcester:oai:wrap.eprints.org:10331 2023-05-15T16:16:11+02:00 The Skullcracker Suit Pt.1:BC Time-slip (The Empire Never Ended) Cussans, John 2021 text http://eprints.worc.ac.uk/10331/ https://eprints.worc.ac.uk/10331/1/Cussans_02%20.pdf https://issuu.com/uwuoa322021/docs/cussans_02 en eng University of Worcester https://eprints.worc.ac.uk/10331/1/Cussans_02%20.pdf Cussans, John orcid:0000-0002-1856-9460 (2021) The Skullcracker Suit Pt.1:BC Time-slip (The Empire Never Ended). University of Worcester. (Submitted) Other NonPeerReviewed 2021 ftunivworcester 2022-03-02T20:00:46Z The Skullcracker Suite (June 2016 - October 2020) is an arts research project engaging the process of decolonization in British Columbia from ethnographic and science fictional perspectives. Named after Hox’hok, the giant man-eating crane of Kwakwaka’wakw legend, the project was conceived as a theatrical allegory for the “permanent decolonization of thought” proposed by the Brazilian anthropologist Eduardo Viveiros de Castro. The project engages five related intellectual contexts from an arts research perspective: cultural anthropology, decolonization studies, inter-cultural psychology, Kwakiutl ethnography and science fiction studies. It addresses these questions: • How might a contemporary art research project contribute to the permanent decolonization of thought? • How might science-fiction be used as a way to frame and reflect upon this process? • How has Kwakwaka’wakw potlatch culture informed it? The first phase of research began as an arts residency in Vancouver investigating the science fiction writer Philip K. Dick’s visit there in 1972 and his stay at an experimental First Nations rehab community called X-Kalay. Historical and scholarly research was conducted performatively within a research installation staged inside a contemporary art space on unceded First Nations territory. This culminated in a multi-component portfolio of works. Through a close reading of Dick’s writing in relationship to Kwakiutl ethnography and De Castro’s Cannibal Metaphysics, I drew a thematic correlation between Dick’s pre-occupation with his deceased twin sister and the motif of the Salmon Twins in Kwakwaka’wakw mythology. This connection was consolidated through the analogy of Dick’s Fomelhaut Albemuth diagram and a print design by the Kwakwaka’wakw artist and Indigenous activist Beau Dick. This would lead to my writing a catalogue essay for Beau’s posthumous exhibition Devoured by Consumerism. Through Beau I was invited to attend the potlatch of Chief Alan Hunt in September 2016. The entire ceremony was documented and edited sections disseminated via YouTube in 2018. Text First Nations University of Worcester: Worcester Research and Publications
institution Open Polar
collection University of Worcester: Worcester Research and Publications
op_collection_id ftunivworcester
language English
description The Skullcracker Suite (June 2016 - October 2020) is an arts research project engaging the process of decolonization in British Columbia from ethnographic and science fictional perspectives. Named after Hox’hok, the giant man-eating crane of Kwakwaka’wakw legend, the project was conceived as a theatrical allegory for the “permanent decolonization of thought” proposed by the Brazilian anthropologist Eduardo Viveiros de Castro. The project engages five related intellectual contexts from an arts research perspective: cultural anthropology, decolonization studies, inter-cultural psychology, Kwakiutl ethnography and science fiction studies. It addresses these questions: • How might a contemporary art research project contribute to the permanent decolonization of thought? • How might science-fiction be used as a way to frame and reflect upon this process? • How has Kwakwaka’wakw potlatch culture informed it? The first phase of research began as an arts residency in Vancouver investigating the science fiction writer Philip K. Dick’s visit there in 1972 and his stay at an experimental First Nations rehab community called X-Kalay. Historical and scholarly research was conducted performatively within a research installation staged inside a contemporary art space on unceded First Nations territory. This culminated in a multi-component portfolio of works. Through a close reading of Dick’s writing in relationship to Kwakiutl ethnography and De Castro’s Cannibal Metaphysics, I drew a thematic correlation between Dick’s pre-occupation with his deceased twin sister and the motif of the Salmon Twins in Kwakwaka’wakw mythology. This connection was consolidated through the analogy of Dick’s Fomelhaut Albemuth diagram and a print design by the Kwakwaka’wakw artist and Indigenous activist Beau Dick. This would lead to my writing a catalogue essay for Beau’s posthumous exhibition Devoured by Consumerism. Through Beau I was invited to attend the potlatch of Chief Alan Hunt in September 2016. The entire ceremony was documented and edited sections disseminated via YouTube in 2018.
format Text
author Cussans, John
spellingShingle Cussans, John
The Skullcracker Suit Pt.1:BC Time-slip (The Empire Never Ended)
author_facet Cussans, John
author_sort Cussans, John
title The Skullcracker Suit Pt.1:BC Time-slip (The Empire Never Ended)
title_short The Skullcracker Suit Pt.1:BC Time-slip (The Empire Never Ended)
title_full The Skullcracker Suit Pt.1:BC Time-slip (The Empire Never Ended)
title_fullStr The Skullcracker Suit Pt.1:BC Time-slip (The Empire Never Ended)
title_full_unstemmed The Skullcracker Suit Pt.1:BC Time-slip (The Empire Never Ended)
title_sort skullcracker suit pt.1:bc time-slip (the empire never ended)
publisher University of Worcester
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.worc.ac.uk/10331/
https://eprints.worc.ac.uk/10331/1/Cussans_02%20.pdf
https://issuu.com/uwuoa322021/docs/cussans_02
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://eprints.worc.ac.uk/10331/1/Cussans_02%20.pdf
Cussans, John orcid:0000-0002-1856-9460 (2021) The Skullcracker Suit Pt.1:BC Time-slip (The Empire Never Ended). University of Worcester. (Submitted)
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