White-Indian Relations: Moving into the 21st Century
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Berlin / Madison, WI: Galda + Wilch Verlag, 2011. 234 p.
Research output: Books and anthologies › Conference proceedings › Research
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TY - BOOK
T1 - White-Indian Relations
T2 - Moving into the 21st Century
A2 - Henck, Maryann
A2 - Moss, Maria
A2 - Völz, Sabrina
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - As we embark upon a new era in White and Indian relations, the focus shifts from past conflicts to present and future rectification of injustices as well as assurances of reconciliation. Although a multitude of the essays deals with the repercussions of past events on the present-day situation of Indigenous people, a clear call for positive change resounds throughout the contributions. Issues as diverse as post-apology Canada, contemporary Native art and storytelling, education as an instrument of acculturation, health inequalities as well as media misrepresentation of the Indigenous population are addressed. Yet, one recurrent and unifying theme continues to resurface in every essay: the theme of identity – identity lost, identity regained, identity redefined. Since the contributions run the gamut of academic disciplines – history, politics, gender studies, literature, art, and anthropology – many of the issues at hand have been illuminated from a variety of perspectives.
AB - As we embark upon a new era in White and Indian relations, the focus shifts from past conflicts to present and future rectification of injustices as well as assurances of reconciliation. Although a multitude of the essays deals with the repercussions of past events on the present-day situation of Indigenous people, a clear call for positive change resounds throughout the contributions. Issues as diverse as post-apology Canada, contemporary Native art and storytelling, education as an instrument of acculturation, health inequalities as well as media misrepresentation of the Indigenous population are addressed. Yet, one recurrent and unifying theme continues to resurface in every essay: the theme of identity – identity lost, identity regained, identity redefined. Since the contributions run the gamut of academic disciplines – history, politics, gender studies, literature, art, and anthropology – many of the issues at hand have been illuminated from a variety of perspectives.
KW - North American Studies
KW - Literature studies
M3 - Conference proceedings
SN - 978-1-931255-50-9
SN - 1931255504
BT - White-Indian Relations
PB - Galda + Wilch Verlag
CY - Berlin / Madison, WI
ER -