Settler-colonial geographical ignorance in Canadian education

Melissa Forcione, Christopher Lamb, Kim Buitenhuis, Anne Godlewska
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Abstract

Despite increasing attention to Indigenous demands for justice, self-governance and the decolonization of Canadian society, many Canadians remain deeply unaware of the complex ways Indigenous and non-Indigenous lives entwine in Canada and of the past and present settler-colonial structures which continue to control and harm Indigenous Peoples and lands. Drawing on our decade-long project examining education at multiple levels in multiple jurisdictions and bringing together scholarship on settler-colonial ignorance, decolonizing education and geographical imaginaries, we highlight how pervasive settler-colonial geographical ignorance, (re)produced through formal education, inhibits many Canadians’ capacities to understand themselves as inextricably linked and responsible to Indigenous Peoples. Through our examination of the results of surveys of college and university students and of public kindergarten to Grade 12 curricula in three Canadian provinces, we provide analyses of settler-colonial forms of geographical unknowing (re)produced in Canadian public education and echoed in the discourses of students. Our analysis draws out commonly held (mis)perceptions and prejudicial attitudes that pervade settler-colonial imaginations, allowing us to identify the entangled temporal, spatial and (non)relational dimensions of settler-colonial geographical ignorance in Canada. Considering the ways that many non-Indigenous people misunderstand and ignore the geographies of settler-colonialism and of Indigenous Peoples, we hope to contribute to ongoing, urgent investigations into the ways that settler-colonial and geographical ignorance serve to oppress Indigenous Peoples and exploit the lands to which they belong for others’ benefit. Furthermore, by focusing on and demonstrating the spatial nature of such ignorance, we argue that (re)conciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Peoples in Canada must also be spatial.
加拿大教育中的移民-殖民地地理无知
尽管越来越多地注意到土著人民对正义、自治和加拿大社会非殖民化的要求,但许多加拿大人仍然完全不了解加拿大土著和非土著生活交织在一起的复杂方式,也不了解过去和现在继续控制和伤害土著人民和土地的移民-殖民结构。根据我们长达十年的项目,研究了多个司法管辖区的多层次教育,并汇集了关于定居者-殖民地无知、非殖民化教育和地理想象的学术研究,我们强调了通过正规教育(重新)产生的普遍定居者-殖民地地理无知如何阻碍了许多加拿大人认识到自己与土著人民有着千难万别的联系和责任。通过对加拿大三个省的大学生和公立幼儿园至12年级课程的调查结果的研究,我们分析了加拿大公共教育中产生的(重新)定居者-殖民形式的地理无知,并在学生的话语中得到回应。我们的分析得出了普遍持有的(错误)观念和偏见态度,这些观念和偏见普遍存在于定居者-殖民地的想象中,使我们能够识别加拿大定居者-殖民地地理无知的纠缠的时间、空间和(非)关系维度。考虑到许多非土著人民误解和忽视移民殖民主义和土著人民地理的方式,我们希望对正在进行的紧急调查作出贡献,调查移民殖民主义和地理无知如何压迫土著人民,并为了他人的利益而剥削他们所属的土地。此外,通过关注和展示这种无知的空间性质,我们认为加拿大土著和非土著人民之间的(重新)和解也必须是空间的。
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