Spectacle, spectrality, and the everyday : settler colonialism, Aboriginal alterity, and inclusion in Vancouver

This dissertation examines everyday social relations in the settler colonial city of Vancouver. Its contemporary ethnographic focus updates and reworks historical and political analyses that currently comprise the growing body of scholarship on settler colonialism as a distinct socio-political pheno...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Baloy, Natalie J. K.
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/46366
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-46366
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-463662018-01-05T17:27:15Z Spectacle, spectrality, and the everyday : settler colonialism, Aboriginal alterity, and inclusion in Vancouver Baloy, Natalie J. K. This dissertation examines everyday social relations in the settler colonial city of Vancouver. Its contemporary ethnographic focus updates and reworks historical and political analyses that currently comprise the growing body of scholarship on settler colonialism as a distinct socio-political phenomenon. I investigate how non-Aboriginal residents construct and relate to Aboriginal alterity. The study is situated in three ethnographic sites, united by their emphasis on “including” the Aboriginal Other: (1) the 2010 Winter Olympics, which featured high-profile forms of Aboriginal participation (and protest); (2) the Mount Pleasant public library branch, which displays a prominent Aboriginal collection and whose staff works closely with the urban Aboriginal community; and (3) BladeRunners, an inner-city construction program that trains and places Aboriginal street youth in the local construction industry. Participants in this research include non-Aboriginal “inclusion workers” as well as non-Aboriginal patrons at the library, construction workers on a BladeRunners construction placement site, and audiences at Aboriginal Olympic events. I explore how my participants’ affective knowledges shape and are shaped by spatial and racializing processes in the emergent settler colonial present. My analysis reveals how everyday encounters with Aboriginal alterity are produced and experienced through spectacular representations and spectral (or haunting) Aboriginal presence, absence, and possibility in the city. In relation to inclusion initiatives, I argue that discourses of Aboriginal inclusion work to manage and circumscribe Aboriginal difference even as they enable interaction across difference. Ultimately, I suggest that social projects aimed at addressing Aboriginal marginality and recognition must actively engage with and critique non-Aboriginal ideologies, discourses, and practices around racialization, meaning-making, and settler privilege, while working within and against a spectacular and spectralized milieu. This research demonstrates how critical ethnography can be leveraged productively to analyse settler participation in the reproduction and transformation of the colonial project. Arts, Faculty of Anthropology, Department of Graduate 2014-04-10T20:50:34Z 2014-04-10T20:50:34Z 2014 2014-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/46366 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/ Downtown-Eastside (Vancouver, B.C.) University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description This dissertation examines everyday social relations in the settler colonial city of Vancouver. Its contemporary ethnographic focus updates and reworks historical and political analyses that currently comprise the growing body of scholarship on settler colonialism as a distinct socio-political phenomenon. I investigate how non-Aboriginal residents construct and relate to Aboriginal alterity. The study is situated in three ethnographic sites, united by their emphasis on “including” the Aboriginal Other: (1) the 2010 Winter Olympics, which featured high-profile forms of Aboriginal participation (and protest); (2) the Mount Pleasant public library branch, which displays a prominent Aboriginal collection and whose staff works closely with the urban Aboriginal community; and (3) BladeRunners, an inner-city construction program that trains and places Aboriginal street youth in the local construction industry. Participants in this research include non-Aboriginal “inclusion workers” as well as non-Aboriginal patrons at the library, construction workers on a BladeRunners construction placement site, and audiences at Aboriginal Olympic events. I explore how my participants’ affective knowledges shape and are shaped by spatial and racializing processes in the emergent settler colonial present. My analysis reveals how everyday encounters with Aboriginal alterity are produced and experienced through spectacular representations and spectral (or haunting) Aboriginal presence, absence, and possibility in the city. In relation to inclusion initiatives, I argue that discourses of Aboriginal inclusion work to manage and circumscribe Aboriginal difference even as they enable interaction across difference. Ultimately, I suggest that social projects aimed at addressing Aboriginal marginality and recognition must actively engage with and critique non-Aboriginal ideologies, discourses, and practices around racialization, meaning-making, and settler privilege, while working within and against a spectacular and spectralized milieu. This research demonstrates how critical ethnography can be leveraged productively to analyse settler participation in the reproduction and transformation of the colonial project. === Arts, Faculty of === Anthropology, Department of === Graduate
author Baloy, Natalie J. K.
spellingShingle Baloy, Natalie J. K.
Spectacle, spectrality, and the everyday : settler colonialism, Aboriginal alterity, and inclusion in Vancouver
author_facet Baloy, Natalie J. K.
author_sort Baloy, Natalie J. K.
title Spectacle, spectrality, and the everyday : settler colonialism, Aboriginal alterity, and inclusion in Vancouver
title_short Spectacle, spectrality, and the everyday : settler colonialism, Aboriginal alterity, and inclusion in Vancouver
title_full Spectacle, spectrality, and the everyday : settler colonialism, Aboriginal alterity, and inclusion in Vancouver
title_fullStr Spectacle, spectrality, and the everyday : settler colonialism, Aboriginal alterity, and inclusion in Vancouver
title_full_unstemmed Spectacle, spectrality, and the everyday : settler colonialism, Aboriginal alterity, and inclusion in Vancouver
title_sort spectacle, spectrality, and the everyday : settler colonialism, aboriginal alterity, and inclusion in vancouver
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/46366
work_keys_str_mv AT baloynataliejk spectaclespectralityandtheeverydaysettlercolonialismaboriginalalterityandinclusioninvancouver
_version_ 1718584200073838592