{"title":"Editor’s音符","authors":"Janne Lahti","doi":"10.1080/2201473X.2023.2218202","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Settler colonialism is a truly global phenomenon marked by multiple connections that arise from diverse human actions, span great distances, include diverse voices, and engage numerous places. Forming networks of multidirectional linkages, these connections bridge local communities, nations, and empires and they connect the past with the present. Thus, settler colonialism moves within, between, and beyond nations and empires. It leaves its marks and impacts great powers and smaller states alike, while also shaping local communities and individual lives in a myriad of ways. This intricate and nuanced connectivity comes evident also in the articles of our present issue. While this set of articles spotlights the Middle East and Canada, it illustrates the workings of connected settler colonialism by underlining questions of sovereignty, identity, and belonging. Yara Sa’di-Ibraheem and Tovi Fenster provide a very personal story of replacement and dispossession in West Jerusalem. Focusing on one house in Jerusalem that was once a Palestinian family home, they elaborate on the intricate relationship of property in relation to identity and belonging. Jasmin Habib and Amir Locker-Biletzki in turn delve into the dynamics of Zionist settler culture by analyzing the songs of the Jewish-Israeli Communist youth movement. By focusing on communist youth, they interpret cracks and critique of a dominant settler colonial culture. Then the discussion shifts to Canada. Heather L. Elliott, Monica E. Mulrennan, and Alain Cuerrier take a closer look at the relationship between food insecurity and settler colonialism by focusing on the Food Secure Canada’s 2018 Assembly. Much like in the previous articles of this issue, here too contested identities, insecurities, and sovereignty operate at the core of networked phenomenon. Next article continues to map the contested connotations and connections of sovereignty, this time in relation to violence and the Quebec’s Viens Commission, set up in 2016 to investigate allegations of public abuse of Indigenous peoples. Here Trycia Bazinet examines how settler colonialism moves in the personal and the collective, and marks questions of identity and dispossession. Modern-day issues come with deep historical roots also in our article on settler colonial urbanism in Canada’s National Capital Region. Paul Sylvestre and Heather Castleden discuss entangled histories of racial capitalism and settler colonization, stressing how Algonquin people struggle to exercise jurisdiction over lands in the face of colonial invasion. This very local form of placeand race-making signified wider ramifications of the processes of settler colonization. So did Canada’s Treaty No. 6. By examining this treaty, Keavy Martin asks should we understand treaties as mere legal transactions or as marking the making of kinships, and as such central to the possibility of good relations in settler societies today. If kinship should be seen as much more than a metaphor, then how should we understand schooling in shaping settler colonial relations and identities? Matt Henderson describes how settler educators understand Indigenous learners by taking a close look at one paper, The Manitoba Teacher. 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Thus, settler colonialism moves within, between, and beyond nations and empires. It leaves its marks and impacts great powers and smaller states alike, while also shaping local communities and individual lives in a myriad of ways. This intricate and nuanced connectivity comes evident also in the articles of our present issue. While this set of articles spotlights the Middle East and Canada, it illustrates the workings of connected settler colonialism by underlining questions of sovereignty, identity, and belonging. Yara Sa’di-Ibraheem and Tovi Fenster provide a very personal story of replacement and dispossession in West Jerusalem. Focusing on one house in Jerusalem that was once a Palestinian family home, they elaborate on the intricate relationship of property in relation to identity and belonging. Jasmin Habib and Amir Locker-Biletzki in turn delve into the dynamics of Zionist settler culture by analyzing the songs of the Jewish-Israeli Communist youth movement. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
定居者殖民主义是一种真正的全球现象,其特征是多种联系,这些联系源于不同的人类行为,跨越遥远的距离,包括不同的声音,并涉及许多地方。这些联系形成了多向联系的网络,架起了地方社区、国家和帝国的桥梁,连接了过去和现在。因此,移民殖民主义在国家和帝国内部、之间和之外活动。它留下了自己的印记,对大国和小国都产生了影响,同时也以无数种方式塑造了当地社区和个人生活。这种复杂而微妙的联系在本期的文章中也很明显。虽然这组文章聚焦中东和加拿大,但它通过强调主权、身份和归属问题,说明了相互联系的定居者殖民主义的运作。Yara Sa 'di-Ibraheem和Tovi Fenster讲述了西耶路撒冷的更替和剥夺的个人故事。他们以耶路撒冷一所曾经是巴勒斯坦家庭的房子为重点,详细阐述了财产与身份和归属的复杂关系。Jasmin Habib和Amir Locker-Biletzki则通过分析犹太-以色列共产主义青年运动的歌曲,深入研究了犹太复国主义定居者文化的动态。通过关注共产主义青年,他们解释了对占主导地位的移民殖民文化的裂缝和批判。然后讨论转向加拿大。Heather L. Elliott、Monica E. Mulrennan和Alain Cuerrier以2018年加拿大粮食安全大会为重点,深入探讨粮食不安全和定居者殖民主义之间的关系。就像本期之前的文章一样,有争议的身份、不安全感和主权也是网络现象的核心。下一篇文章继续描绘主权有争议的内涵和联系,这一次是与暴力和魁北克的维也纳委员会有关,该委员会于2016年成立,旨在调查公开虐待土著人民的指控。在这里,Trycia Bazinet研究了移民殖民主义如何在个人和集体中移动,并标记了身份和剥夺的问题。在我们关于加拿大国家首都地区移民殖民城市主义的文章中,现代问题也有着深刻的历史根源。Paul Sylvestre和Heather Castleden讨论了种族资本主义和移民殖民的纠缠历史,强调了阿尔冈昆人在面对殖民入侵时如何努力行使对土地的管辖权。这种非常地方性的地方和种族形成形式意味着移民殖民化过程中更广泛的后果。加拿大的第6号条约也是如此。通过研究这个条约,Keavy Martin提出,我们是否应该将条约理解为仅仅是法律交易,还是标志着亲属关系的建立,以及在今天的定居者社会中建立良好关系的可能性。如果亲属关系不仅仅是一种隐喻,那么我们应该如何理解学校教育在塑造定居者殖民地关系和身份方面的作用?马特·亨德森通过仔细研究一篇论文《曼尼托巴教师》,描述了移民教育者是如何理解土著学习者的。这篇文章展示了殖民者殖民教育的许多紧张关系,在文化抹去和同化之间,在争取自我表达和土著复兴之间。
Settler colonialism is a truly global phenomenon marked by multiple connections that arise from diverse human actions, span great distances, include diverse voices, and engage numerous places. Forming networks of multidirectional linkages, these connections bridge local communities, nations, and empires and they connect the past with the present. Thus, settler colonialism moves within, between, and beyond nations and empires. It leaves its marks and impacts great powers and smaller states alike, while also shaping local communities and individual lives in a myriad of ways. This intricate and nuanced connectivity comes evident also in the articles of our present issue. While this set of articles spotlights the Middle East and Canada, it illustrates the workings of connected settler colonialism by underlining questions of sovereignty, identity, and belonging. Yara Sa’di-Ibraheem and Tovi Fenster provide a very personal story of replacement and dispossession in West Jerusalem. Focusing on one house in Jerusalem that was once a Palestinian family home, they elaborate on the intricate relationship of property in relation to identity and belonging. Jasmin Habib and Amir Locker-Biletzki in turn delve into the dynamics of Zionist settler culture by analyzing the songs of the Jewish-Israeli Communist youth movement. By focusing on communist youth, they interpret cracks and critique of a dominant settler colonial culture. Then the discussion shifts to Canada. Heather L. Elliott, Monica E. Mulrennan, and Alain Cuerrier take a closer look at the relationship between food insecurity and settler colonialism by focusing on the Food Secure Canada’s 2018 Assembly. Much like in the previous articles of this issue, here too contested identities, insecurities, and sovereignty operate at the core of networked phenomenon. Next article continues to map the contested connotations and connections of sovereignty, this time in relation to violence and the Quebec’s Viens Commission, set up in 2016 to investigate allegations of public abuse of Indigenous peoples. Here Trycia Bazinet examines how settler colonialism moves in the personal and the collective, and marks questions of identity and dispossession. Modern-day issues come with deep historical roots also in our article on settler colonial urbanism in Canada’s National Capital Region. Paul Sylvestre and Heather Castleden discuss entangled histories of racial capitalism and settler colonization, stressing how Algonquin people struggle to exercise jurisdiction over lands in the face of colonial invasion. This very local form of placeand race-making signified wider ramifications of the processes of settler colonization. So did Canada’s Treaty No. 6. By examining this treaty, Keavy Martin asks should we understand treaties as mere legal transactions or as marking the making of kinships, and as such central to the possibility of good relations in settler societies today. If kinship should be seen as much more than a metaphor, then how should we understand schooling in shaping settler colonial relations and identities? Matt Henderson describes how settler educators understand Indigenous learners by taking a close look at one paper, The Manitoba Teacher. This article showcases the many tensions of settler colonial schooling, between cultural erasure and assimilation, and fight for self-expression and Indigenous resurgence.
期刊介绍:
The journal aims to establish settler colonial studies as a distinct field of scholarly research. Scholars and students will find and contribute to historically-oriented research and analyses covering contemporary issues. We also aim to present multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary research, involving areas like history, law, genocide studies, indigenous, colonial and postcolonial studies, anthropology, historical geography, economics, politics, sociology, international relations, political science, literary criticism, cultural and gender studies and philosophy.