Situating the S-Slur Within the Colonial Imaginary: The Shaping and Shaming of Indigenous Un/Womanhood in Western Canada during the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries

Sinéad O'Halloran
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Abstract

This paper charts the shifting connotations, uses and impacts of the s-slur, a derogatory term used by colonizers to refer to Indigenous women, in archival Western Canadian newspapers. It aims to demonstrate the influences of hetero-patriarchy, racism, and capitalism on the perception of Indigenous ‘un/womanhood’ during the expansion of the settler state. It draws upon feminist and linguistic frameworks to examine the coloniality of gender, naming, and slurs. By examining how the use of the s-slur fluctuated between insinuations of victimhood (in relation to Indigenous gender roles, traditions, and marriage) and threat (in association with sexual deviancy and sex work), this paper aims to demonstrate how the term represented both sides of the racialized gender dichotomy, depending on how it could best serve the colonial project. This research is an attempt to understand the legacies of violence inflicted by, and encapsulated in, the use of this word towards Indigenous women, and to argue for the necessity of de-normalizing its use.
在殖民想象中定位s -诽谤:19世纪末和20世纪初加拿大西部土著女性身份的塑造和羞辱
本文描绘了在加拿大西部报纸档案中殖民者对土著妇女的贬义词s-slur的内涵、用法和影响的变化。它旨在展示在移民国家扩张期间,异性父权制、种族主义和资本主义对土著“非/女性”认知的影响。它利用女权主义和语言框架来研究性别、命名和辱骂的殖民性。通过研究s-slur的使用如何在暗示受害者(与土著性别角色、传统和婚姻有关)和威胁(与性偏差和性工作有关)之间波动,本文旨在展示该术语如何代表种族化性别二分法的两个方面,这取决于它如何最好地服务于殖民项目。这项研究试图了解这个词对土著妇女的使用所造成的暴力遗留问题,并认为有必要将其使用正常化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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