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A Hard Kick between His Blue Blue Eyes: The Decolonizing Potential of Indigenous Rage in Sherman Alexie’s “The Business of Fancydancing” and “Indian Killer”Weatherford, Jessica A. 22 September 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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"La división del mundo entre los que se rehúsan a ser comprendidos y los que buscan darse a entender sin que esto les aporte privilegio alguno": Vindication of Land and Reason in Saraguro, EcuadorVincent, Leah C. 16 April 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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“I Don't Remember Those Wins and Losses, I Remember the Experience”: Native American Student-Athlete Experiences in College and AthleticsDryden, Amari 26 July 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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Race mindedness in the physical architecture of Winnipeg's former civic auditoriumMaton, Timothy 21 January 2016 (has links)
Centred on the architecture of the Winnipeg Civic Auditorium, this thesis tangentially investigates the presence of Anglo-Saxon race mindedness in a place civic planners call the metropolitan centre of North America (Watt, 1932). The introduction situates the building tangentially in Manitoba's history. By thinking about the Civic Auditorium in a tangential manner I aim to attack the linear and sequential framework found in Eurocentric historical accounts. Doing this, my thesis criticises western architectural history and welcomes Indigenous reinterpretations of civic planning and urban aesthetics. I aim to philosophically attack the informational rhetoric of the cultural turn (Fabian, 1983). My thesis participates in the production of a material turn discourse, wherein the important philosophical relationship between objects and occidental culture is demonstrated (Otter, 2010; Bennett & Joyce, 2010; Hamilton, 2013). It utilises the Civic Auditorium as a touch stone to demonstrate the important ways that architecture has agency in the production of racism. / February 2016
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Queer indigenous rhetorics: decolonizing the socio-symbolic order of Euro-American gender and sexual imaginariesAllsup, Andrew January 1900 (has links)
Master of Arts / Communication Studies / Timothy R. Steffensmeier / This thesis explores the rhetorical function of creative writing being written by queer/two-spirit identified indigenous authors. The rhetorical function being the way these stories politicize the various ways gender and sexuality were foundational tools of settler colonialism in de-tribalizing and assimilating indigenous folks. The literary perspective often elides politics in favor of deconstructing aspects of creative writing such as genre, syntax, and themes instead of the socio-political potential such works produce. The three works I examine all have something to teach rhetorical scholars about the need to politicize the socio-sexual and gendered imaginaries of settler colonialism in discourses of the founding fathers, manifest destiny, westward expansion, land purchase. statehood, American exceptionalism, democracy promotion, and many more. They fundamentally challenge rhetorics that posit static notions of American identity and/or purpose that represses the historical and ongoing genocide of indigenous culture and life. In this way, they intervene in the very notion of communicability itself within the socio-symbolic economy of settler colonialism and its attendant hetero-patriarchal gendered and sexual imaginaries.
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Voices of Bangladeshi Environmental Youth Leaders: A Narrative StudyPappianne, Paige 10 May 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Dándoles más de lo que pidieron: la justicia epistemológica en <i>El abrazo de la serpiente</i> de Ciro GuerraPinchot, Ryan Bradley 14 June 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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"Knowledge on Wheels": An Anti-colonial and Indigenous African Feminist Approach to Education in GhanaKyei Mensah, Phyllis 13 July 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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Researching Critical Incidents of TransformationScheele, Paul R. 26 April 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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The Andean Exception: An Interdisciplinary Approach to the Absence of Large-Scale Indigenous Social Mobilization in PeruUhrig, Megan Nicole 23 July 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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