Léonard, Naomie; Buckell, Jennifer; Ainsley Vincent, Raphaëlle; Drouin-Gagné, Marie-Eve ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0009-6326-981X et Guimont Marceau, Stéphane
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8295-0928
(2022).
Layers of settler urbanization and indigenous relational place-making: uncovering an ongoing palimpsest
Urban Geography
.
DOI: 10.1080/02723638.2022.2129712.
Résumé
Cities in settler-colonial states imply a continuous settlement in Indigenous territories and on unceded land. With each layer of colonial enterprises, there is also Indigenous resistance to it, which in turn brings on new interruptions and displacements. Each layer relates to previous ones and, as an urban palimpsest, public spaces become multilayered places, with permanent processes of displacements and dispossession and re-territorialization and re-possession. And if the settler-colonial city is a useful framework to understand the multiple layers of colonial processes happening in an urban public space, we suggest that the notion of the palimpsest enlightens also the multiple layers of Indigenous presence and continuous place-making as a resistance to these processes.
Type de document: | Article |
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Mots-clés libres: | Ville coloniale; colon; autochtone; résistance autochtone; déplacement; dépossession; territoire; palimpseste |
Centre: | Centre Urbanisation Culture Société |
Date de dépôt: | 16 janv. 2023 20:03 |
Dernière modification: | 16 avr. 2025 17:09 |
URI: | https://espace.inrs.ca/id/eprint/13155 |
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