Unsettling Settler Colonialism PDF
Unsettling Settler Colonialism PDF
Unsettling Settler Colonialism PDF
Unsettling settler colonialism: The
discourse and politics of settlers, and
solidarity with Indigenous nations
Corey Snelgrove
University of British Columbia
Jeff Corntassel
University of Victoria
Abstract
Our goal in this article is to intervene and disrupt current contentious debates regarding the
predominant lines of inquiry bourgeoning in settler colonial studies, the use of settler, and the
politics of building solidarities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. Settler colonial
studies, settler, and solidarity, then, operate as the central themes of this paper. While
somewhat jarring, our assessment of the debates is interspersed with our discussions in their
original form, as we seek to explore possible lines of solidarity, accountability, and relationality
to one another and to decolonization struggles both locally and globally. Our overall conclusion
is that without centering Indigenous peoples articulations, without deploying a relational
approach to settler colonial power, and without paying attention to the conditions and
contingency of settler colonialism, studies of settler colonialism and practices of solidarity run
the risk of reifying (and possibly replicating) settler colonial as well as other modes of
domination.
2014 C. Snelgrove, R. Dhamoon & J. Corntassel This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0), permitting all
non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Introduction
Our goal in this article is intervene and disrupt current contentious debates regarding the
predominant lines of inquiry bourgeoning in settler colonial studies, the use of settler, and the
politics of building solidarities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. These three
themes are not only salient in scholarly debates but also in practices of Indigenous resurgence,
decolonization, anti-racism, feminist and queer work, and in alliances that challenge corporate
pipeline expansion, resource extraction, colonial environmentalism, neo-liberal exploitation of
temporary foreign workers, and violence against women, transgendered, and queer people.
Through our own particular engagements with these issues, the three of us came together to think
through our different relationships to settler colonial studies, debates about the term settler, and
decolonizing relations of solidarity, with a shared commitment to practicing and/or supporting
Indigenous resurgence. By Indigenous resurgence we mean ways to restore and regenerate
Indigenous nationhood (Corntassel, 2012) and the repatriation of Indigenous land and life
(Tuck & Yang, 2012). By centering Indigenous resurgence, we resist the disavowal of a colonial
present still defined by Indigenous dispossession, we center transformative alternatives to this
present articulated within Indigenous resurgence, and we remain attentive to the very ground
upon which we stand. Indigenous resurgence, then, is our organizing frame for responding to the
three themes of this essay, namely settler colonialism, settlers, and solidarity.
First, our process of thinking together revealed some uncertainty about the emerging
institutionalization of settler colonial studies and its relationship to Indigenous studies; at the
same time, the practice, structure, governmentality, and politics of settler colonialism distinctly
sharpens the focus on ongoing colonialism, the dispossession of Indigenous lands, and the
actual/attempted elimination of Indigenous peoples. It is this focus on power, land, and
Indigenous bodies that we centre in our approach to the study of settler colonialism. But our
understanding of settler colonialism is not one-dimensional; instead, we begin from the position
that it is intrinsically shaped by and shaping interactive relations of coloniality, racism, gender,
class, sexuality and desire, capitalism, and ableism. This multi-dimensional understanding of
settler colonialism enables specificity in the ways to which place, culture, and relations of power
are approached; reflects the ways in which the State has governed subjects differently; and
emphasizes that the disruption of settler colonialism necessitates the disruption of intersecting
forces of power such as colonialism, heteropatriarchy and capitalism. Second, our analysis and
dialogue about the term settler illuminated that, whether using Indigenous words for settler or
the English word settler, these terms should be discomforting and provide an impetus for
decolonial transformation through a renewed community-centered approach. This decolonizing
praxis requires what Kanaka Maoli scholar Noelani Goodyear-Kapua (2013, pp. 30, 36) calls
land-centered literacies which are based on an intimate connection with and knowledge of
the land. At the same time, our concerns go beyond the proper assignment of settler, where we
are vigilant of those who adopt and legitimize a way of thinking with an imperialists mind
(Alfred, 2009, p. 102). Third, while the language of solidarity does not fully capture the way we
approach social struggles as interconnected, our collective conversations highlighted for us that
Unsettling incommensurabilities 3
solidarity between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples must be grounded in actual practices
and place-based relationships, and be approached as incommensurable but not incompatible.
We came together to think through the organizing concepts and politics of this paper
together after a roundtable discussion at a Canadian political science conference that included
two of the authors, with the third in the audience. The roundtable topic was broadly on settler
colonialism, territorialities, and embodiments. Because of our pre-existing interests in anticolonialism and decolonization, we were already aware of each others scholarly and nonacademic work and commitments to the politics of Indigenous resurgence. In particular, we were
aware that as a methodology, a collective interview between a cis-gendered Tsalagi (Cherokee)
man (Jeff Corntassel), cis-gendered white male (Corey Snelgrove), and cis-gendered woman of
colour of Sikh origin (Rita Dhamoon) with different vantage points and interests would prompt
multiple, albeit circumscribed, perspectives on settler colonialism, settler, and solidarity.
Given the proliferation of academic and non-academic sources on these topics over recent
years, we had already been engaging together in these conversations informally (we have been at
the same institution for two years, on Lekwungen and W SNE territories) and it was a natural
step to co-author a paper. We began first by assessing some of the recent literature on these
concepts, and then started with the same questions for each concept, which we posed to one
another in a series of face-to-face meetings over a period of a year. Our guiding questions were:
how did we assess the current debates/literature on settler colonialism, and how can we disrupt
some of the hegemonies that inevitably arise in the theory and practice of solidarity work
between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. Flowing from these questions emerged other
sub-questions that reflected the debates in the relevant literature and our understanding of
Indigenous resurgences. We recorded the interviews, and Corey transcribed the interviews (it is
not lost on us that he was the student among us!). Two important methodological and
epistemological points are worth emphasizing in our choice to conduct our collective interviews
over an extended period of time: first, that it disrupted some (certainly not all of) the power
dynamics of the expert scholar, where we each learned from one another and shifted our
thinking collaboratively, challenged one another about our power differentials, and were
constantly reminded of practicing our politics in theoretically-rich and action-oriented ways.
Second, we unexpectedly built new kinds of relationships with one another that will travel with
us as we take social action across issues and navigate the academy. This relationship building
was an important reminder to us that good relations across differences take time and care, and a
willingness to live in contention. As Nishnaabeg scholar Leanne Simpson points out,
Resurgence cannot occur in isolation. A collective conversation and mobilization is critical to
avoid reproducing the individualism and colonial isolation that settler colonialism fosters (2011,
p. 69). Similarly, for Tsalagis (Cherokees), there is a word, digadatselei, which means we
belong to each other. If we take these relationships seriously, we must be willing to work
through contention and, at times, disrupt discourses that reinscribe the colonial status quo.
As a way to anchor our power differentials and our various approaches to decolonization
and resurgence, we begin by locating our social and cultural positions. This form of self-location
Unsettling incommensurabilities 5
peaceful or healthy relationships. You only approach another Indigenous nation after you have
thought it through, over and over again, and if there is willingness on the part of the host
nation(s) to include or accept strangers.
How do our ancestors recognize us as Cherokee or Indigenous even when were not
living on our homelands? Ultimately its about how we honor our place-based responsibilities
and live our values and principles, as Tsalagi in everyday life, even when the land were on does
not recognize us. While the land may not recognize us, the goal is to be known not as strangers
but as welcome visitors with accountability to the Indigenous nations and peoples of the
territory.
Corey Snelgrove: I come from a family of predominantly English, Scottish, and German
ancestors who arrived to the Eastern coast of what is now known as the United States from the
early 17th century onwards, moving west and north in search of opportunity until arriving, at
various times and in various places, on Anishinaabe and Haudenosaunee homelands around Lake
Ontario. I come from a family of white settlers. And like my ancestors, I too have moved in
search of opportunity and I now find myself occupying Lekwungen and W SNE homelands.
I too am a white settler, a colonizer. This recognition though is not meant to signal any
innocence. There are no good settlers; there are no good colonizers. Instead, it signals complicity
in the on-going processes of dispossession and eschewal of Indigenous nationhood. It necessarily
connects me to histories and presents which shape how I came and come to be(ing) here. It is a
sign that demands, that alludes to an accounting of, responsibility for, and nothing less than the
destruction of settler colonialism. But a sign can also obscure, acting as an illusion, and disavow,
operating as an elusion
As the OED definition (in the Appendix) states, to settle involves both subjectformation and governance. Settlers have to be made and power relations between and among
settlers and Indigenous peoples have to be reproduced in order for settler colonialism to extend
temporally and spatially. Part of this subject formation involves disavowal of the processes of
dispossession and disavowal of Indigenous governance structures. If we do not want to, my
family and I do not have to think about, let alone experience, the violent processes that
condition(ed) how we came and come to be here. Conversely, when we do choose to think about
this, we are often able (and even encouraged) to think of it in terms of a celebratory, benevolent
past. Yet, are all settlers able to ignore the processes of how one comes to be here or to think of
it in terms of a celebratory past?
The subject formation and governance inherent to settling also involves processes of
ordering, which govern the very notions of belonging. These processes of ordering, such as those
based on white supremacy, not only enhance our privileges through exploitation, but also further
enable my family and I to feel at home in others homeland(s), or as the case may be, to
disparage and even flee at the sight of Other(s). Belonging, after all, requires the discursive
production and circulation of those who do not belong. To settle then remains differentiated in
terms of race, national-origin, religion, class, dis/ability, sexuality, and gender. All of these
Unsettling incommensurabilities 7
think about the violence against Indigenous peoples if I choose not to; it is to presume
permanency, a temporality without an end; it is a way to establish authority over others, as the
State and its settlers seek to do over Indigenous peoples; it is a mode of masculinity in which the
land is married to exploitative capital; to settle does not require all settlers to own private
property, but like many settlers I do. I now have citizenship in Canada, I was born and educated
in the UK, and later further educated in Canada, I speak English with a western accent, I have a
middle-class income, I carry no overt religious markings, and I have settled on stolen Indigenous
land. Are these just performative declarations
And, I do not have a firm foundation in this place, I have not ceased from migration,
am not resting after agitation or occupying a place that represents an end of a series of
changes, I am not seeking to secure permanent regulations upon others by decree, ordinance,
or enactment. But it doesnt matter. Settler colonialism does not work at the individual level, or
need my consent or the consent of other individuals even, for it is a way of governing through a
naturalized nation-state that erases Indigenous peoples and implicates us all, however wellintentioned we are, or differentially located. Like Corey, the white man among us, I am a settler,
but the structural location of colonizer is more complex for me. My family, especially my great
grandparents and grandparents were anti-colonialists in India, during formal British imperialism.
Being anti-colonial is in me. I work to honour the struggles of my people against white
supremacy and in my ongoing responsibilities towards other Others. I am suspicious of white
men, and also know that the relationship with them cannot just be instrumental. I am suspicious
of cis-men active in social struggles more generally, and also have obligations to Jeff, our
Indigenous cis-male co-author, who symbolically legitimizes this collective paper, and in other
ways to Corey who is also seeking a different way of being in the world. What holds us together,
I think, in writing this paper, is our willingness to build relationships that centre power, anger
(against what we each represent to the other), and the possibilities of love. With others, and in
the context of interwoven struggles of social justice, I seek to unsettle.
Unsettling incommensurabilities 9
settler colonialism is unable to transcend itself precisely because it is conceptualized as a
structure, where the only polarizing choices available to Indigenous peoples are either to be coopted or hold a position of resistance/sovereign, while anti-colonial action by settlers is
foreclosed. Fourth, the framework of settler colonialism has fostered over-characterizations of
binary positions. Saranillio (2013), for instance, notes two common charges against settler
colonial studies: that it affirms a binary of Indigenous and non-Indigenous, and that it leads to a
neo-racist form of politics that requires non-Natives leave Indigenous territories (arguments that
Sarinillo rejects). Moreover, we note that this binary, at times, has the effect of treating settler
colonialism as a meta-structure, thus erasing both its contingency and the dynamics that coconstitute racist, patriarchal, homonationalist, ablest, and capitalist settler colonialism.
The institutionalization of settler colonial studies is quite remarkable. While some
Indigenous journals have struggled to receive institutional support and funding, the journal
Settler Colonial Studies first published in 2011 in an open access format (entirely run on
volunteer labour) to bring together critical scholarship on settler colonialism as a distinct social,
cultural and historical formation with ongoing political effects (Edmonds and Carey, 2013, p. 2)
moved to a large academic publishing house, Taylor & Francis, within two years of being
established. This institutionalization has been coupled with a proliferation of academic
conferences, workshops, courses, and has also moved beyond academic confines through blogs,
websites, workshops and teach-ins.
The institutionalization of settler colonial studies (rather than Indigenous studies) is on
the one hand a significant shift in the academy. On the other hand, as de Leeuw, Greenwood, and
Lindsay (2013) rightly argue, even when (and perhaps because) there are good intentions to
decolonize and to cultivate a culture of doing the right thing, there are no fundamental shifts
in power imbalances between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples or the systems within
which we operate (p. 386). Settler colonialism and the study of settler colonialism, in other
words, cannot be decolonized because of good intentions. Following this, paradoxically and in
deeply troubling ways, settler colonial studies can displace, overshadow, or even mask over
Indigenous studies (for example, see Veracini, 2013) and variations within Indigenous studies,
especially feminist and queer Indigenous work that is centred on Indigenous resurgence. Indeed
the link between Indigenous studies and settler colonial studies is still in process. The synergies
between the literature by/on two-spirited Indigenous identities, queer theory, Indigenous studies
more broadly, and settler colonial studies are notable in their interwoven conversations across
fields of study. But at times, Indigenous peoples and issues are de-centred in settler colonial
studies (for example, Rifkin, 2013, p. 323). Furthermore, while Rifkin is right to argue that
settler colonial practices and processes operate in everyday ways, are these practices really in the
background (2013, p. 331), and for whom? Is settler colonialism largely invisible, as Barker
(2012) claims?
Yes, settler colonialism is naturalized, pervasive, and not just state-centred, but for whom
is settler colonialism in the background and invisible? These kinds of claims seem to presume
white settler subjectivity as the monolithic lens through which to examine settler colonialism and
Discussion
Jeff: What is the role of settler colonial studies in Indigenous studies? How should
this conversation take place?
Corey: A recent issue of Settler Colonial Studies (3:3) came out with a
corresponding issue in American Indian Culture and Research Journal (37:2),
though both issues were edited by Patrick Wolfe. This makes me wonder about
whether this is a way of building bridges between settler colonial studies and
Indigenous studies, or instead, given that Wolfe edited both issues, is this a
talking at? I also wonder whether settler colonial studies is isolating itself,
talking to the same crowd? Whats more useful, isolation or disruption?
Rita: It does seem self-sustaining on some level which may be inevitable since
were operating within an academic industrial complex. It seems complicated
because on the one hand its really good that settlers are taking this on as a project
both theoretically and in practice. My concern is that it resonates with the
emergence of critical whiteness studies and mens studies in the 1980s and 1990s,
where there is some sort of anxiety at play for dominant groups. I wonder what
anxieties are being masked over in the emergence and legitimacy of settler
colonial studies, as a field distinct from Indigenous studies.
Jeff: It is interesting to see where Settler Colonial Studies thinks this is going to
go. Are there legitimate linkages that they are trying to make? Or is it just about
establishing their legitimacy as a field of inquiry?
Rita: Those scholars building queer critiques of settler colonialism who are
working with Indigenous peoples in collaborative ways seem to make linkages in
ways that is not as well reflected in settler colonial studies more generally. Its
hard to assess at this stage, as in some ways it is early days for this field of study,
although as Veracini notes in his work, settler colonial studies has a long history.
Corey: One reaction I have to these questions is that, for myself at least, it wasnt
reading settler colonial studies that triggered anything for me, to begin to look
critically at myself, my family, Canada. I cant help but think that in these works,
the work and resistance of Indigenous peoples is overshadowed. For example, we
Unsettling incommensurabilities 11
can look at Veracinis history of the concept [of settler colonialism] where
Indigenous studies and Indigenous resistance is pretty much erased. Veracini
briefly names both on the second last page, but then immediately goes on to credit
white historians.
Rita: What you say Corey reminds of Black feminist bell hooks, who made the
same point in the 1980s around the ways in which white feminists talk about
critical whiteness studies, about how she was always doing critical whiteness
studies that was always her work. Shes not a black feminist just talking about
women of colour, for whiteness constitutes how we understand women of
colour. And so I wonder at the same time whether the claiming, or the framing of
settler colonial studies itself, casts a shadow over the work that is being done by
Indigenous scholars, who have been talking about the centrality of land, the
specific nature of Indigenous experiences, and the role of settlers in dispossession
for a long time now.
Jeff: I saw that when I was a grad student in political science. In the early 90s,
political science scholars were just beginning to discuss Indigenous selfdetermination when Indigenous scholars and activists had been acting on it for
decades by asserting their self-determining authority within United Nations
forums and on their homelands (for example, Akwesasne Notes, 1978). Yet it was
non-Indigenous folks writing about this that received the acclaim the other
Indigenous research didnt conform to what was conceived of as Political
Science so when settlers take up these questions, its suddenly considered a
legitimate field of study.
Rita: Right. Exactly.
Jeff: Before its viewed as a bunch of native activistsas I was called once, an
activist posing as an academic. And now with the involvement of settler
academics its viewed as a legitimate field of inquiry.
Rita: And theres something interesting too as people of colour are entering this
discussion, often on terms set by white scholars and activists. This is a really
interesting, ambiguous moment I think for people of colour, generating an anxiety
that has prompted new ways of making declarations of solidarity. It is not
Indigenous peoples who are anxious whether people of colour are defined as
settlers. And while I think this moment serves to relieve white anxiety, for people
of colour it has become about which side we are on, where do we place ourselves
as non-Indigenous people who are trying to navigate racism and be accountable to
Unsettling incommensurabilities 13
Rita: Right. Manage it, with the effect of depoliticizing the gendered nature of
dispossession.
Jeff: And if we have 5000-8000 Indigenous nations around the world trapped
within 77 different countries, we become peoples for states to manage. The
underlying logic is that of an Indigenous problem to be contained. Locate the
problem, and
Rita: Eradicate it
Jeff: Spatially locate it, ideologically, temporally all these things
The questions we raise here on settler colonialism and power, prompted us to further reflect on
the scholarly and activist debates on conceptions of settler and how we understand this
positionality.
Discussion
Who is a settler? And why does it matter? These questions have been a preoccupation in activism
and theory over recent years, especially for non-Indigenous peoples engaged in anti-colonial
work, rather than Indigenous peoples. It is an anxiety that has manifested itself among white
allies and, it seems more recently, communities of colour. Yet, despite the discussion and debate
within the academy and beyond, there is ambiguity in regards to what is meant by settler.
In examining the definition of settler in the hegemonic site for English definitions and
etymologies that is the Oxford English Dictionary (OED), in comparison with other, critical
articulations of settler, we can observe some resonances with and perhaps even a
foreshadowing of the contemporary discussions and debates around the term. Perhaps most
importantly in terms of its utility, throughout both the OED definition and other articulations, the
occupation of land is central. In the OED definition of settle, place and property are
central in a number of usages. This is echoed by a number of other articulations. For example,
Wolfe (2006) states that access to land is the primary motive for eliminating the native, and in
settler colonialism settler-colonizers come to stay (p. 388); Bonita Lawrence and Ena Dua
(2005) locate people of colour as settlers by virtue of living and owning land appropriated from
Indigenous peoples, as well as exercising and seeking rights that are collectively denied to
Indigenous peoples; Veracini (2011b) notes that settlers do not discover: they carry their
sovereignty and lifestyles with them. As they move towards what amounts to a representation of
the world, as they transform the land into their image, they settle another place without really
moving (p. 206); and Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang (2012) similarly conclude that settlers are
those who make Indigenous land their home and source of capital. In addition, the OED also
gestures to the relationship between settler colonial power and other forms of power, such as
Discussion
Corey: So the question of who is a settler?
Rita: I think about the work Ive done with Indigenous peoples weve had the
conversations around about being on stolen land, or treaty land, where treaties
have not been honoured by colonizers, and the obligations of non-Indigenous
peoples, but Ive not had Indigenous peoples express anxiety about the term settler.
There has been an anxiety that I think has long existed among non-Indigenous
peoples about how to be accountable about being on colonized land. The anxiety
about settler is just a recent manifestation of that.
Jeff: And also what is your set of criteria in defining a settler
Rita: Its in activist spaces for sure these kinds of declarations Im a settler,
Im pro-Palestinian, I support gays it can become a kind of mantra if we dont
explain why we are making these statements. The term can be paralyzing for some
non-Indigenous people who are absorbed by guilt, or it can mobilize action.
Settler certainly situates non-Indigenous peoples in a structural relationship to
dispossession of Indigenous land and within imperialistic nation-building projects
that require ongoing settlement. But its contentious. Some folks are using
different terms altogether: Scott Morgensen (2010) uses the term non-Native in
his piece on Settler Homonationalism and Jodi Byrd (2011) references arrivants
in Transit of Empire to make distinctions between white settlers and settlers of
Unsettling incommensurabilities 15
colour. Its also become clear that statements of I am settler can become
performative.
Jeff: Exactly. The thinking or mindset seems to be that settlers are in a different
category, that theyve shifted the terrain of discussion.
Rita: Yes. This seems especially heightened among people of colour since Bonita
Lawrence and Ena Dua published their 2005 piece on decolonizing antiracism,
which criticizes people of colour for failing to centre our implication in Indigenous
dispossession. From their perspective, while there are differences among
differently positioned people of colour (refugees, migrant workers, economic
immigrants etc.), we are settlers. Sharma and Wright (2009) have responded to this
by arguing that people of colour are not settlers, but they make their argument by
denying Indigenous peoples relationship to their traditional lands. Then a third
kind of response has emerged from some people of colour to say that we are
settlers but not the same as white settlers. I find this third response more
compelling, but I think the debate about types and degrees of settler is a distraction
from critiques of how gendered dispossession, neo-liberal migration policies, and
masculinist, capitalist white supremacy are linked.
Corey: Im hesitant on the analogy between white declarations of anti-racism, and
settler declarations of being a settler. Mostly because a declaration of being an
anti-racist is different than saying one is a settler. The former is a move to
innocence, the latter is not necessarily so. Yet, at the same time, I dont mean to
argue that moves to innocence arent happening with these declarations. For
instance, we can see it on social media around upsettler.
Rita: Tell us about this concept.
Corey: I think it was actually Eric Ritskes who said this phrase upsettler1 is a
form of distancing, a move to innocence, as if those using it are saying Im not
like them. Im not the problem. As a move to innocence, its a deferral of ones
complicity and responsibility, as if colonization is only a problem because of
others not quite getting it. In moves to innocence, those performing the move
presume that there is such a thing as a good settler, a good colonizer, as if
decolonization can occur outside of large scale, systematic subjective and
objective transformations. While Ive used upsettler myself, its use, obviously
including my own, raises concerns because Im interested in the potential of the
settler term how it can be used to open discussions around responsibility, to
1
Unsettling incommensurabilities 17
of settler society and represent the lived experiences of Indigenous nations amidst
settler occupation. Often hearing that the word settler is offensive to some people
or polarizing, I find that using Indigenous words to describe settler relationships
can help to re-center the discussion and potential actions of solidarity back into
community. Just as it is a challenge for Cherokees to be welcomed into another
nations territory as strangers, there is an urgent need for settlers to change their
current relationships with the local Indigenous nations on whose territory they
reside. If this is not the relationship one wants to embody, whether as yonega or
hwunitum or any number of Indigenous terms for settler, then the impetus is on the
settler to change the nature of the relationship by taking direction from Indigenous
nations themselves. The ultimate goal is to create the need for a new word or
phrase to describe positive features of a settler-Indigenous relationship.
Corey: Weve had similar conversations about this Jeff. And I think there is great
potential in using Indigenous terms. It literally makes that Indigenous nation
known to the settler, challenging the lie of Indigenous disappearance. It also
reminds me of that scene on the train in France in Black Skin, White Masks, where
Fanon identifies the enemy and makes himself known. And although the
deployment of settler certainly identifies the enemy (to me that is its function), it
fails to make the Indigenous nation known. So, what youre talking about Jeff, this
sort of counter-performative and thereby transformative demand, is often obscured
by the definitions alone, especially when they are taken out of context, as well as
by settler colonial studies, through their representation of settler colonialism as
transhistorical and inevitable. I think this is at least partially attributed to the
overshadowing of Indigenous peoples articulations their own accounts of
Indigenous-settler relations, their own governance, legal and diplomatic orders.
This then also stresses the importance of centering Indigenous resurgence to avoid
the further disavowal of colonization and colonial fatalism, as well as to inform
decolonization efforts.
In the next section, we build on Jeffs conclusions to consider ways to approach settlerIndigenous relations in ways that are directed towards disrupting settler colonialism and fostering
Indigenous resurgences.
Unsettling incommensurabilities 19
same time, following Coulthard (2014), centering the colonial relation corrects an excessively
temporal framing of [primitive accumulation] (p. 58), resists becoming complicit in the very
structures and processes of domination that [critical theory] ought to oppose through, for
instance, blanket calls to reclaim the commons (p. 61), and, echoing Smith above, prevents
overlooking what could prove to be invaluable glimpses into the ethical practices and
preconditions required of a more humane and sustainable world order (p. 61).
In our collective discussion, we consider the question of solidarity in relation to the
challenges and alternatives articulated above, specifically looking at some of the temporal and
spatial aspects of solidarity building and how these relationships unfold.
Discussion
Rita: We need to problematize the question of solidarity because it separates
issues, as if Indigenous issues are distinctly separate from migration issues, issues
around temporary foreign workers, violence against women, etc. in two ways. One,
it suggests that the white settler nation doesnt need to maneuver different bodies
Indigenous bodies, white bodies, bodies of colour, male, female, trans, queer, poor,
disabled, religious, secular, citizens, noncitizen workers, refugees differently.
And also, in my case, people of colour are also structurally implicated in
dispossession, whether thats our choice or not. So it posits that your issues of
Indigenous land are not separate from my issues if I care about racism, sexism,
and that I must think about the ways they are related to settler colonialism.
Jeff: I guess for me solidarity gets away from the direct accountability, the trust
elements that are embedded in any relationship that you have. So that trust and
accountability are ongoing feedback loops, if you will, that you have to constantly
renegotiate or reinterpret in order to act in solidarity, or act in concert, or act in
camaraderie. But I think these terms mask the messiness of that overall process.
Corey: I agree with both your critiques. Solidarity does sometimes seem to imply a
distinctness that, like you state Rita, ignores relations and complicity between. And
like you state Jeff, there does seem to be an underlying conceptualization of
solidarity as temporal event.
Jeff: And in terms of the temporal, at what point does forgetfulness become a
problem? A Tsalagi saying, Live in a longer now learn your history and
culture and understand it is what you are now, urges us to consider that notions of
time are fluid and flexible. After all, the Tsalagi word for I am forgetting is
agikewsga, which literally means I am blind or am unable to see something that
happened in the past (Altman and Belt, 2012, p. 232). To live in a longer now, it
Unsettling incommensurabilities 21
think of the history of colonialisms, of my family, and my role in Canada now to
use settler colonialism because it centres the dispossession of land as a
distinguishing and ongoing colonial feature. Colonial assemblages certainly exist
in India today too, such as in the road or education system but this is not
government by a colonial body. The challenge is when we see colonialisms and
racisms as separate, because the dispossession of Indigenous peoples lands is
related to the history of British and European imperialism in India, Africa, the
Caribbean, and other parts of the world, and also continuing. And these are
patriarchal, heteronormative, ablest, and capitalist imperial formations that remain
relevant today.
Corey: This relational, interdependent focus is also important amongst settlers
ourselves perhaps as a way to counter the flattening of differences that occurs
amongst settlers, particularly in solidarity work. Settlers obviously need to be
doing our own work and challenging our institutions and practices that serve to
protect or further colonization. But we cant do this if we flatten the differences
and ignore the inequalities and power relationships that exist within settler society.
Not only does such flattening prevent much needed alliances but flattening itself
can actually work to protect certain elements of settler colonialism. For instance,
white supremacy works to naturalize white settler presence. In terms of solidarity
then, I find it problematic for myself, as a white, class privileged, cis-hetero, and
able bodied male (as well as people like me) to demand other peoples to act in
solidarity, while also not holding myself (and others like me) responsible and
accountable to other forms of violence that may be a contributing factor to the
further reification of structures that support settler colonialism, like the State. Now
Im not arguing for the continued eschewal of Indigenous governance and legal
orders because others experience violence, but rather, that the substantive
recognition of Indigenous governance and legal orders also requires a dismantling
of other, related forms of domination. This latter dismantling I see as necessary but
also insufficient for the dismantling of settler colonialism. These sites and spaces
of domination and resistance are distinct, but also connected dialectically. This
seems to be something that settlers, white settlers specifically, have yet to
articulate and take up, critique and act against. And this is perhaps most evident in
how settlers seem to be continuously waiting for instruction from Indigenous
peoples on how to act.
Rita: I wonder if this relational approach is a more useful direction for settler
colonial studies, not unlike the kind of work you do Jeff, in thinking about
colonialism in a global, comparative context.
Unsettling incommensurabilities 23
and are practices by settlers that arent colonial (and here is where centering
Indigenous peoples accounts of Indigenous-settler relations, as well as their own
governance, legal and diplomatic orders is crucial). But I think its just as
important to recognize that these relations have and do not occur despite settler
colonial and imperial logics, and thus outside of the binary. Rather, such relations
occur in the face of it. The binary then is fundamental as the logics that uphold the
binary cannot be ignored due to the existence of possiblly good relations as the
logics that uphold the binary threaten those relations through the pursuit of the
elimination of Indigenous peoples.
Rita: Yet, how do we act in light of these entanglements, and with, rather than
overcoming differences?
Corey: Tuck and Yang (2012) had this really great article, Decolonization is not a
Metaphor. In it, they talk about the importance of an ethics of incommensurability
a recognition of how anti-racist and anti-capitalist struggles are
incommensurable with decolonization. But what Ive been thinking about recently
is whether these struggles are incompatible. For example, in the Indigenous
resurgence literature, there is a turn away, but its also not an outright rejection. It
also demands settlers to change. Yet recognizing that settlers are (re)produced, the
change demanded is not just an individual transformation, but one connected to
broader social, economic, and political justice. There are then, it seems, potential
lines of affinity between decolonization and others, though incommensurable,
struggles. And in order to sustain this compatibility in the face of
incommensurability, relationships are essential in order to maintain accountability
and to resist repeating colonial and other relations of domination, as well as, in
very strategic terms, in supporting each others resistance.
Rita: As some anti-racist and Indigenous feminists have long argued, its not
possible for people of colour to confront different racisms without thinking about
sexism, capitalist exploitation, homophobia and transphobia, Indigenous struggles
they are tied to one another. There is an affinity between decolonization and
other struggles. Differently positioned people of colour and Indigenous peoples are
not operating with the same kinds or degrees of authority as whites or each other,
but nonetheless we are not outside of these relations and forces of power.
Jeff: I like building off Tuck and Yang too. Its a way of showing the linkages
across these movements, but also how they can be tighter. How can we deepen
them and focus on the everyday acts of resurgence that Indigenous peoples engage
in?
Rita: What you say reminds me Corey about a question you have raised in another
context on temporal and spatial solidarities.
Corey: In June 2013, at Congress, you both were on a panel titled Solidarities,
Territorialities, and Embodiments. At this panel, Jeff, you seemed to be
challenging Ritas notion of temporary solidarities by emphasizing the
importance of relationship grounded in place. So I first would question how useful
temporary solidarities as a concept is. Second, Im wondering about the
importance of bringing the role of territorialities within these discussions of
solidarity themselves. Maybe, Jeff, what you were talking about at Congress and in
conversations you and I have had, is a gesturing towards what we could potentially
call spatial solidarities or bringing spatiality into discussions of solidarity.
Jeff: As the late Vine Deloria, Jr. (2001) has said, power and place produce
personality. In this sense, place-based relationships are personal and anything
approaching spatial solidarity would entail the regeneration of Indigenous
languages, ceremonial life, living histories, and nationhood. For this reason, spatial
solidarities can be a way to localize struggles for Indigenous resurgence. While the
Idle No More movement, which began in 2012 in Canada as a response to
proposed legislation by Prime Minister Stephen Harpers government that
undermined Indigenous protections of land and water, tapped into an ongoing and
collective Indigenous struggle for land, culture and community, the settler support
for it was predominantly temporally driven and performative rather than localized
and land-based. I find that the most powerful mobilization for change happens
when the spatial and temporal intersect.
Rita: This centering of land strikes me as constitutive to any kind of political work
with Indigenous peoples. Can you give an example Jeff?
Jeff: One example might be how settlers are welcomed onto Indigenous homelands
among Native nations in Australia. Beginning in the 1980s, Tasmanian activist
and lawyer, Michael Mansell, issued Aboriginal Passports to an Indigenous
delegation visiting Libya in 1988. More recently, Aboriginal Passports have been
issued to non-Indigenous people living on Indigenous homelands. Someone
visiting Indigenous homelands in Australia can apply for an Aboriginal Passport
and sign a pledge stating that, We do not support the colonial occupation of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander lands (Aboriginal Passport Ceremony,
2012). This innovative strategy challenges the authority of the Australian
government to regulate the travel of visitors onto Indigenous homelands and raises
Unsettling incommensurabilities 25
awareness of contemporary struggles of Indigenous peoples in order to build
solidarity for future movements.
Rita: Corey, your question is helpful, and Jeffs response also helps me think
through the movement between time-situated and place-based practices of
solidarity and ways of thinking about these situated practices in terms of an ethos
of unsettled solidarities that moves across time and space, that is a way of being
in the world, a set of ongoing relations. Where I, where we, are never outside of
struggle, everyone is structurally implicated in the dispossession of Indigenous
lands. Everyone is differentially structurally implicated, where the ideology of
presumed consent underlies settler colonialism.
Jeff: I would add that living on another Indigenous nations territory also carries an
obligation to support those defending their homelands. Cheryl Bryce from
Songhees First Nation started the Community Tool Shed in 2009 to generate
support for the restoration of Lekwungen food systems. The Community Tool
Shed in Victoria, British Columbia, is where settlers and Indigenous peoples can
come together to rid the land of invasive species, such as Scottish Broom, and to
revitalize traditional plants such as kwetlal or camas. Cheryls focus for this
informal group is on reclaiming traditional place names, educating people about
the destructiveness of invasive species, and reinstating Lekwungen food systems.
The tool shed meets once per month to pull invasive species on places that have
been managed by Cheryls family for generations, such as Meegan (aka, Beacon
Hill Park), and Sitchamalth (Willows Beach). To a resident of Lekwungen
homelands, the above-mentioned places are public lands. This demonstrates the
urgency of reclaiming Indigenous place names in tandem with the restoration of
Indigenous foodscapes and landscapes. The May 22, 2013 reclamation of the name
PKOLS (formerly known as Mount Douglas) is one of many examples where
communities can come together to demand representation on their own terms.
These are everyday acts of resurgence that highlight the terrain of Indigenous
struggles to restore and reconnect a place-based existence.
Corey: And both examples you highlighted Jeff do not foreclose a wide-range of
participants. The PKOLS reclamation led by the W SNE peoples, involved
participation from Indigenous peoples across Vancouver Island and across Turtle
Island, it involved the university through the Indigenous Governance program, and
it involved local, non-Indigenous, activist groups, most notably Social Coast. The
Community Tool Shed, a project that Ive also been involved in for the past two
years, does something similar. What I find really interesting in this work is that
settlers and Indigenous peoples challenge our environmentally degraded and
Conclusion
Decontextualized conceptions of settler colonial studies, settler, and solidarity risk further
eschewing Indigenous peoples and thereby reifying the stolen land each of the above is founded
upon. Perhaps, most centrally, this is done through de-centering Indigenous peoples own
articulations of Indigenous-settler relations, their governance, legal, and diplomatic orders, and
the transformative visions entailed within Indigenous political thought. Such de-centering has the
potential to present settler colonialism as complete or transhistorical, as inevitable, rather than
conditioned and contingent. This failure to attend to the conditions and contingency of settler
colonialism can also be traced to the marginalization of how colonization actually proceeds
across time and space. That is, as entangled with other relations of domination, and not only
through structures, but also practices that serve as, what Paige Raibmon (2008) refers to,
microtechniques of dispossession. Those who critique settler colonialism through
transhistorical representations are then able to feel good and satisfied about their criticisms,
despite their ahistoricism and decontextualization, and thus their own role in actually sustaining
colonial power by failing to attend to its conditions and contingency.
Unsettling incommensurabilities 27
We ask: what good is it to analyze settler colonialism if that analysis does not shed light
on sites of contradiction and weakness, the conditions for its reproduction, or the spaces and
practices of resistance to it? What is the purpose of deploying settler without attention to its
utility, to what it alludes to or eludes from? What good is solidarity if it cannot attend to the
literal (and stolen) ground on which people stand and come together upon?
In this paper, we have argued for a contextual approach to the questions of settler
colonialism, settlers, and solidarity. It is ultimately about accountability to each other, as the
Tsalagi word, digadatselei suggests, and treating Indigenous resurgence as a process that cannot
occur in isolation. This, as argued throughout this paper, demands a centering of and support for
Indigenous resurgences, and a shift from a one-dimensional to a relational approach to settler
colonial analyses that is connected to the issue of other Others. This also demands place-based
solidarities that is, relationships and practices that center both Indigenous resurgences and
more relational approaches to settler colonial power. After all, settler colonialism will not be
undone by analysis alone, but through lived and contentious engagement with the literal and
stolen ground on which people stand and come together upon.
Appendix
Settle, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, means:
1. To seat, place
2. To place (material things) in order, or in a convenient or desired position; to adjust (i.e.
ones clothing)
3. To place (a person) in an attitude of repose, so as to be undisturbed for a time
4. To cause to take up ones residence in a place; esp. to establish (a body of persons) as
residents in a town or country; to plant (a colony). Two derivatives from the fourth
definition are to fix or establish permanently (ones abode, residence, etc.), and to
furnish (a place) with inhabitants or settlers
5. To fix, implant (something) in (a persons heart, mind, etc.)
6. To set firmly on a foundation; to fix (a foundation) securely
7. Of things, esp. of flying or floating objects [] to come down and remain
8. To come together from dispersion or wondering [] of a body of persons: To direct
their course to a common point
9. Of things: To lodge, come to rest, in a definite place after wandering
10. Of persons: To cease from migration and adopt a fixed abode; to establish a permanent
residence [] become domiciled, with its derivative as of a people: to take up its
abode in a foreign country. Also to establish a colony
11. To come or bring to rest after agitation
12. Of persons: To become composed; to compose oneself to sleep; to come to a quiet or
orderly state after excitement or restless activity
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