Anguilla Rostrata, Our Teacher: Addressing Anishnabe Epistemicide through Eels

Epistemicide is proposed in global social theory to describe the deliberate decline of pluralistic knowledge that results from sweeping processes of assimilation and coloniality, including the introduction of settler colonialism as a way of being in place throughout North America. Attention to ontol...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gansworth, Leora
Other Authors: Wood, Patricia Burke
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10315/40657
id ftyorkuniv:oai:yorkspace.library.yorku.ca:10315/40657
record_format openpolar
spelling ftyorkuniv:oai:yorkspace.library.yorku.ca:10315/40657 2023-05-15T13:28:56+02:00 Anguilla Rostrata, Our Teacher: Addressing Anishnabe Epistemicide through Eels Gansworth, Leora Wood, Patricia Burke 2022-12-14T16:26:34Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10315/40657 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10315/40657 Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests. Geography Native American studies Environmental studies Anishinaabe Anishnabe Epistemicide Indigenous geography Indigenous knowledge Anishninaabe legal traditions Anguilla rostrata Indigenous research methods Anishinaabe research methods Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2022 ftyorkuniv 2023-01-08T00:01:29Z Epistemicide is proposed in global social theory to describe the deliberate decline of pluralistic knowledge that results from sweeping processes of assimilation and coloniality, including the introduction of settler colonialism as a way of being in place throughout North America. Attention to ontological pluralities demonstrates that individuals and groups are living in and from different Lebenswelt, or lifeworlds, a concept that supports different understandings of constructed and overlapping places and spaces to include epistemological foundations, phenomenological orientations, behaviours and institutions. Anguilla rostrata, also known as eels, are migratory fishes with a deep saltwater origin who can traverse an aquatic path over two thousand miles; they migrate to and enter some freshwater environments across the North American continent. Anguillid species have been historically crucial to Indigenous societies and cultures around the world and are presently threatened by human behaviours. Anguilla rostrata has experienced massive decline in recent decades throughout North America, evoking an uneven response in multiple sectors. This dissertation seeks to align with methods and conventions in Anishnabe studies, informed by concepts in critical Indigenous geography and Indigenous environmental justice scholarship. The methods develop an embodied lifeworld that inquires about Anguilla rostrata through Anishnabe epistemological framing. The research is informed by an emerging Anishnabe geography along with Indigenous legal traditions for the revitalization of Indigenous lifeways as viable methods by which to frame possibilities for improved relationships with ecologies where Anguilla rostrata migrate. Using place-based research, digital surveys, and interviews, the research offers possibilities for an enhanced understanding of eels through pursuit of epistemic justice. Approach of relationships with Anguilla rostrata involves temporal, environmental, and cognitive justice that argues for the eel’s right to be ... Thesis anishina* York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
institution Open Polar
collection York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
op_collection_id ftyorkuniv
language English
topic Geography
Native American studies
Environmental studies
Anishinaabe
Anishnabe
Epistemicide
Indigenous geography
Indigenous knowledge
Anishninaabe legal traditions
Anguilla rostrata
Indigenous research methods
Anishinaabe research methods
spellingShingle Geography
Native American studies
Environmental studies
Anishinaabe
Anishnabe
Epistemicide
Indigenous geography
Indigenous knowledge
Anishninaabe legal traditions
Anguilla rostrata
Indigenous research methods
Anishinaabe research methods
Gansworth, Leora
Anguilla Rostrata, Our Teacher: Addressing Anishnabe Epistemicide through Eels
topic_facet Geography
Native American studies
Environmental studies
Anishinaabe
Anishnabe
Epistemicide
Indigenous geography
Indigenous knowledge
Anishninaabe legal traditions
Anguilla rostrata
Indigenous research methods
Anishinaabe research methods
description Epistemicide is proposed in global social theory to describe the deliberate decline of pluralistic knowledge that results from sweeping processes of assimilation and coloniality, including the introduction of settler colonialism as a way of being in place throughout North America. Attention to ontological pluralities demonstrates that individuals and groups are living in and from different Lebenswelt, or lifeworlds, a concept that supports different understandings of constructed and overlapping places and spaces to include epistemological foundations, phenomenological orientations, behaviours and institutions. Anguilla rostrata, also known as eels, are migratory fishes with a deep saltwater origin who can traverse an aquatic path over two thousand miles; they migrate to and enter some freshwater environments across the North American continent. Anguillid species have been historically crucial to Indigenous societies and cultures around the world and are presently threatened by human behaviours. Anguilla rostrata has experienced massive decline in recent decades throughout North America, evoking an uneven response in multiple sectors. This dissertation seeks to align with methods and conventions in Anishnabe studies, informed by concepts in critical Indigenous geography and Indigenous environmental justice scholarship. The methods develop an embodied lifeworld that inquires about Anguilla rostrata through Anishnabe epistemological framing. The research is informed by an emerging Anishnabe geography along with Indigenous legal traditions for the revitalization of Indigenous lifeways as viable methods by which to frame possibilities for improved relationships with ecologies where Anguilla rostrata migrate. Using place-based research, digital surveys, and interviews, the research offers possibilities for an enhanced understanding of eels through pursuit of epistemic justice. Approach of relationships with Anguilla rostrata involves temporal, environmental, and cognitive justice that argues for the eel’s right to be ...
author2 Wood, Patricia Burke
format Thesis
author Gansworth, Leora
author_facet Gansworth, Leora
author_sort Gansworth, Leora
title Anguilla Rostrata, Our Teacher: Addressing Anishnabe Epistemicide through Eels
title_short Anguilla Rostrata, Our Teacher: Addressing Anishnabe Epistemicide through Eels
title_full Anguilla Rostrata, Our Teacher: Addressing Anishnabe Epistemicide through Eels
title_fullStr Anguilla Rostrata, Our Teacher: Addressing Anishnabe Epistemicide through Eels
title_full_unstemmed Anguilla Rostrata, Our Teacher: Addressing Anishnabe Epistemicide through Eels
title_sort anguilla rostrata, our teacher: addressing anishnabe epistemicide through eels
publishDate 2022
url http://hdl.handle.net/10315/40657
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10315/40657
op_rights Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
_version_ 1765997373549445120