The Promise and Peril of Walking Indigenous Territorial Recognitions carried out by Settlers

This article proposes that if the permission and guidance of local Indigenous groups is obtained, and their protocols observed, a collaborative physical act of settler, or Indigenous-settler walking across territory on which events are to be held may constitute a more constructive form of "terr...

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Subtitles:"Sacred Journeys 7: Pilgrimage and Beyond: Going Places, Far and Away"
Authors: Wilson, Kenneth M. 1956- (Author) ; Anderson, Matthew R. (Author)
格式: 電子 Article
語言:English
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出版: Dublin Institute of Technology 2021
In: The international journal of religious tourism and pilgrimage
Year: 2021, 卷: 9, 發布: 2, Pages: 46-54
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Kanada / 原住民 / 領土 / 土地權 / 開拓者 / 承認
IxTheo Classification:AD Sociology of religion; religious policy
KBQ North America
ZB Sociology
ZC Politics in general
Further subjects:B Walking
B Theology in the City
B Treaty
B Decolonisation
B Indigenous
B Kahnawà:ke
B Kanien'kehá:ka
B territorial acknowledgement
B settler-colonial
B Haldimand Tract
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實物特徵
總結:This article proposes that if the permission and guidance of local Indigenous groups is obtained, and their protocols observed, a collaborative physical act of settler, or Indigenous-settler walking across territory on which events are to be held may constitute a more constructive form of "territorial acknowledgement" than a verbal statement read out at such an event. By drawing sustained attention not only to Indigenous land but also to Indigenous title, resources, and jurisdiction, and by pointedly underlining the actual land in question, walking territorial acknowledgements can help settlers to develop an embodied sense of place-in-relation. In so doing they can move forward both the relationality implicit in Indigenous territorial recognition and the claims territorial recognitions make on settler bodies. These walk-acts diminish the superficial "virtue-signalling" and public performance of contrition which too often attach to such acknowledgements, threatening to render them obsolete.
ISSN:2009-7379
Contains:Enthalten in: The international journal of religious tourism and pilgrimage
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.21427/wmx8-e578