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9781469693736 Academic Inspection Copy

Irreconcilable

Indigeneity and the Violence of Colonial Erasure in Contemporary Canada
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Since the early 2000s, the Canadian government has attempted reconciliation with Indigenous nations through varied efforts: treaty processes, government commissions, rebranding campaigns for settler-owned businesses, workshops for state and local officials, school curriculum changes, and a recently christened national holiday However, as Joseph Weiss argues, these state-driven initiatives reinforce Indigenous subordination to the settler state. This incisive study of the varied responses from both Indigenous Nations and individuals to reconciliation illuminates how it is implicated in ongoing colonial erasure. Critically engaging with a variety of fields, including Indigenous studies, anthropology, history, political theory, semiotics, and museum studies, Weiss captures the multiple scales at which these contested dynamics unfold and explores their underlying technologies of erasure. Irreconcilable unpacks how reconciliation offers amends for anti-Indigenous violence while disavowing responsibility for that violence, and argues that settler promises of reconciliation cannot be reconciled to the fact of Indigenous sovereignty. Nevertheless, Weiss illustrates how Indigenous Peoples refuse erasure at every turn, instead building alternate futures and lived worlds that are not always already colonially overdetermined.
Joseph Weiss is associate professor of anthropology and science and technology studies at Wesleyan University.
"A powerful study that reveals the anti-Indigenous violence of reconciliation politics in Canada. Sparkles with theoretical acuity and clarity."-Audra Simpson, author of Mohawk Interruptus: Political Life Across the Borders of Settler States "Synthesizing an impressive range of Indigenous scholarship with research on ruins, museum objects, and legal language, Joseph Weiss delivers a brilliant analysis of reconciliation as a settler response to Indigenous sovereignty."-Eugenia Kisin, author of Aesthetics of Repair: Indigenous Art and the Form of Reconciliation
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