Looking at the Past
Looking at the Past
Erin Morton
Podcast for History 1715 Visual Culture: Looking at the Past at the University of New Brunswick with Dr. Erin Morton.
Episode 13 “This Work Is Not for You”: Two-Spirit Kinship
Looks at Dayna Danger’s photography series Big’Uns with the scholarship and activism of Jas M. Morgan, and their 2017 “Kinship” issue of Canadian Art magazine.
Mar 24, 2021
19 min
Episode 12 - Inuit Filmmaking and Food Sovereignty
Examines the concept of northern food sovereignty in relation to Alethea Arnaquq-Baril’s 2016 film “Angry Inuk.”
Mar 24, 2021
16 min
Episode 11 - Orientalism, Art, Imperialism
Covers the work of Palestinian-American scholar Edward Said, his concept of Orientalism, and European art and literature’s invention of “the Orient.”
Mar 24, 2021
16 min
Episode 10 - Photography, Film, and the “Tourist Gaze”
Working with John Urry’s concept of the “tourist gaze” (1990) to understand the documentary work of Dennis O’Rourke and his 1988 film “Cannibal Tours.”
Mar 22, 2021
16 min
Episode 9 - Asian Canadian Art Matters
Explores the work of art historian Dr. Alice Ming Wai Jim and her Ethnocultural Art Histories research group at Concordia University, pertaining to histories of Asian art and Asian diaspora in Canada.
Mar 15, 2021
16 min
Episode 8 - Colonial Canadian Art History and the “Order of Terror”
Surveying the colonial foundations of Canadian Art History using the work of Welastekwewiyik historian Andrea Bear Nicholas and her award-winning article in the Journal of Canadian Studies (2015).
Mar 8, 2021
16 min
Episode 7 - On Disability and “Cripping” the Arts
Draws on Christinina Myers’s recent article in Canadian Art magazine, on a symposium entitled “Cripping the Arts” (Toronto 2019) in relation to Canada’s Bill C-81.
Feb 22, 2021
16 min
Episode 6 - Claiming “Bad Kin”
This week we work with Dr. Alexis Shotwell’s concept of white settlers claiming “bad kin” under settler colonialism, in relation to Dr. Sheelah McLean’s concepts of white meritocracy from her article “We built a life from nothing.”
Feb 22, 2021
13 min
Episode 5 - Black Fungibility and “Seeing” Enslavement
Uses work by Black scholars Saidiya Hartman, Tiffany Lethabo King, and Robyn Maynard to examine the visual culture of enslavement.
Feb 8, 2021
16 min
Episode 4 - “How to Steal a Canoe” and Anti-Indigenous Cultural Violence
Discusses Leanne Betasamosake Simpson’s 2016 animated short, directed by Amanda Strong, in the context of the Canadian government’s 1884 potlatch ban and Audra Simpson’s concept of settler statecraft.
Feb 1, 2021
16 min
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