Mythologies of an (un)dead Indian

This dissertation explores the aesthetics of contemporary Indigenous identity— its various manifestations, simulations, hybridizations, (dis)appearances, and liminalities. It is a project about the lived experience of ancestry conceived of through narratives of shapeshifting, virtuality, sacrifice,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Leween, Jackson Twobears
Other Authors: Kroker, Arthur, Alfred, Taiaiake
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3855
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spelling ftuvicpubl:oai:dspace.library.uvic.ca:1828/3855 2023-05-15T16:16:10+02:00 Mythologies of an (un)dead Indian Mythologies of an undead Indian Leween, Jackson Twobears Kroker, Arthur Alfred, Taiaiake 2012-03-22 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3855 English en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3855 Available to the World Wide Web Indigenous philosophy First Nations art contemporary native performance post-structural theory digital media art Thesis 2012 ftuvicpubl 2022-05-19T06:14:31Z This dissertation explores the aesthetics of contemporary Indigenous identity— its various manifestations, simulations, hybridizations, (dis)appearances, and liminalities. It is a project about the lived experience of ancestry conceived of through narratives of shapeshifting, virtuality, sacrifice, hauntings and possession. This project is representative of a period of time in an on-going journey that began long before these first words were written…and one that I intend will continue long after this book’s completion. The methodological approach to this work is multifaceted, encompassing the fields of Indigenous philosophy, digital media art and cultural studies. It is a project comprised of several interrelated strands of theoretical speculation, philosophical inquiry and creative engagement. This dissertation is in many ways an autobiographical text—a meditation on my own Kanien’kehaka (Mohawk) heritage and the spaces I occupy in the world as Onkwehonwe (an Indigenous person). At its core it is about exploring different modes of engagement with my own ancestral ‘territories’, while at the same time it endeavors to ask larger questions about collective memory, community, and cultural inheritance. In being representative of a journey, the interrelated strands of writings in this text are meant to be traversal, and are about surveying and mapping different intellectual and creative territories. This text is about crossing interdisciplinary zones of theoretical inquiry that occur at the intersection and hybridization of Indigenous and Western philosophies, contemporary First Nations performance art and post-structuralist theory. It is a work comprised of ebbs and flows, movements, refrains, and cascades of articulation that interpenetrate and cross over into one another. This text is therefore best thought of as a series of theoretical passageways—a multiplicity of thoughts and critical engagements in motion, translation and conversion. It must be said that the traversals and crossings in this text are not ... Thesis First Nations University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace Indian
institution Open Polar
collection University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace
op_collection_id ftuvicpubl
language English
topic Indigenous philosophy
First Nations art
contemporary native performance
post-structural theory
digital media art
spellingShingle Indigenous philosophy
First Nations art
contemporary native performance
post-structural theory
digital media art
Leween, Jackson Twobears
Mythologies of an (un)dead Indian
topic_facet Indigenous philosophy
First Nations art
contemporary native performance
post-structural theory
digital media art
description This dissertation explores the aesthetics of contemporary Indigenous identity— its various manifestations, simulations, hybridizations, (dis)appearances, and liminalities. It is a project about the lived experience of ancestry conceived of through narratives of shapeshifting, virtuality, sacrifice, hauntings and possession. This project is representative of a period of time in an on-going journey that began long before these first words were written…and one that I intend will continue long after this book’s completion. The methodological approach to this work is multifaceted, encompassing the fields of Indigenous philosophy, digital media art and cultural studies. It is a project comprised of several interrelated strands of theoretical speculation, philosophical inquiry and creative engagement. This dissertation is in many ways an autobiographical text—a meditation on my own Kanien’kehaka (Mohawk) heritage and the spaces I occupy in the world as Onkwehonwe (an Indigenous person). At its core it is about exploring different modes of engagement with my own ancestral ‘territories’, while at the same time it endeavors to ask larger questions about collective memory, community, and cultural inheritance. In being representative of a journey, the interrelated strands of writings in this text are meant to be traversal, and are about surveying and mapping different intellectual and creative territories. This text is about crossing interdisciplinary zones of theoretical inquiry that occur at the intersection and hybridization of Indigenous and Western philosophies, contemporary First Nations performance art and post-structuralist theory. It is a work comprised of ebbs and flows, movements, refrains, and cascades of articulation that interpenetrate and cross over into one another. This text is therefore best thought of as a series of theoretical passageways—a multiplicity of thoughts and critical engagements in motion, translation and conversion. It must be said that the traversals and crossings in this text are not ...
author2 Kroker, Arthur
Alfred, Taiaiake
format Thesis
author Leween, Jackson Twobears
author_facet Leween, Jackson Twobears
author_sort Leween, Jackson Twobears
title Mythologies of an (un)dead Indian
title_short Mythologies of an (un)dead Indian
title_full Mythologies of an (un)dead Indian
title_fullStr Mythologies of an (un)dead Indian
title_full_unstemmed Mythologies of an (un)dead Indian
title_sort mythologies of an (un)dead indian
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3855
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3855
op_rights Available to the World Wide Web
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