Reconciliation with an Indigenous Elder and a Euro-Western settler through co-created art and conversation

Many Indigenous peoples, cultures and communities across the globe have experienced some form of colonization or genocide that caused adverse effects. Often the relationship among colonizer and Indigenous people have been tarnished and plagued with pain. As a non-Indigenous middle school teacher who...

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Main Author: Larose, Darren Michael
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Electronic version published by Vancouver Island University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/13908
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spelling ftvancuislanduni:oai:viurrspace.ca:10613/13908 2023-05-15T16:16:46+02:00 Reconciliation with an Indigenous Elder and a Euro-Western settler through co-created art and conversation Larose, Darren Michael 2019 101 pg. text application/pdf https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/13908 en eng Electronic version published by Vancouver Island University https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/13908 Reconciliation Arts Thesis 2019 ftvancuislanduni 2022-01-17T11:51:08Z Many Indigenous peoples, cultures and communities across the globe have experienced some form of colonization or genocide that caused adverse effects. Often the relationship among colonizer and Indigenous people have been tarnished and plagued with pain. As a non-Indigenous middle school teacher who teaches Indigenous students and who has taught First Nations Studies, it was necessary to build my knowledge of Indigenous ways of knowing. A third of the students at the school I teach are identified as Indigenous, therefore I had to change my implicit ignorance. In this study, I, a Euro-western settler teacher artist, collaborated with, Qwaya Sam, an Indigenous Elder artist and cultural leader, to co-create art and share conversation. During our time together, we discussed many topics surrounding Indigenous ways of knowing and Euro-western ways of knowing. Most of the time we met in my art studio, sharing openly and honestly with each other. We developed a relationship while advancing our understanding of reconciliation through co-creating art and conversation. This project led to an Indigenous-settler approach of cultural reconciliation through the (1) co-creation of artwork, (2) sharing of recorded conversations, and (3) co-analysis of the artwork together through analytical memos. This approach may be used for those who seek to develop rich and meaningful relationships across different cultures. Ultimately, both members benefited in unique ways through the process of reciprocal learning. https://viurrspace.ca/bitstream/handle/10613/13908/Larose.pdf?sequence=3&isAllowed=y Thesis First Nations Vancouver Island University: Viuspace
institution Open Polar
collection Vancouver Island University: Viuspace
op_collection_id ftvancuislanduni
language English
topic Reconciliation
Arts
spellingShingle Reconciliation
Arts
Larose, Darren Michael
Reconciliation with an Indigenous Elder and a Euro-Western settler through co-created art and conversation
topic_facet Reconciliation
Arts
description Many Indigenous peoples, cultures and communities across the globe have experienced some form of colonization or genocide that caused adverse effects. Often the relationship among colonizer and Indigenous people have been tarnished and plagued with pain. As a non-Indigenous middle school teacher who teaches Indigenous students and who has taught First Nations Studies, it was necessary to build my knowledge of Indigenous ways of knowing. A third of the students at the school I teach are identified as Indigenous, therefore I had to change my implicit ignorance. In this study, I, a Euro-western settler teacher artist, collaborated with, Qwaya Sam, an Indigenous Elder artist and cultural leader, to co-create art and share conversation. During our time together, we discussed many topics surrounding Indigenous ways of knowing and Euro-western ways of knowing. Most of the time we met in my art studio, sharing openly and honestly with each other. We developed a relationship while advancing our understanding of reconciliation through co-creating art and conversation. This project led to an Indigenous-settler approach of cultural reconciliation through the (1) co-creation of artwork, (2) sharing of recorded conversations, and (3) co-analysis of the artwork together through analytical memos. This approach may be used for those who seek to develop rich and meaningful relationships across different cultures. Ultimately, both members benefited in unique ways through the process of reciprocal learning. https://viurrspace.ca/bitstream/handle/10613/13908/Larose.pdf?sequence=3&isAllowed=y
format Thesis
author Larose, Darren Michael
author_facet Larose, Darren Michael
author_sort Larose, Darren Michael
title Reconciliation with an Indigenous Elder and a Euro-Western settler through co-created art and conversation
title_short Reconciliation with an Indigenous Elder and a Euro-Western settler through co-created art and conversation
title_full Reconciliation with an Indigenous Elder and a Euro-Western settler through co-created art and conversation
title_fullStr Reconciliation with an Indigenous Elder and a Euro-Western settler through co-created art and conversation
title_full_unstemmed Reconciliation with an Indigenous Elder and a Euro-Western settler through co-created art and conversation
title_sort reconciliation with an indigenous elder and a euro-western settler through co-created art and conversation
publisher Electronic version published by Vancouver Island University
publishDate 2019
url https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/13908
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/13908
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