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This week… the first in a two-part conversation that confronts the confusion and contention around what it means to be Métis. In their new article, "White Settler Revisionism and Making Métis Everywhere: The Evocation of Métissage in Québec and Nova Scotia." Co-authors Adam Gaudry (University of Alberta) and Darryl Leroux (Saint Mary's University) argue that moves by some settler communities to insert a "Métis" identity into places and periods they don't belong—namely, outside the Prairie homelands of the historic Métis Nation—all in an effort to "self-Indigenize," don't just constitute wrong-headed fantasy, but a real and present danger to genuine Indigenous self-determination. // Our theme is 'nesting' by birocratic.
By Rick Harp4.9
126126 ratings
This week… the first in a two-part conversation that confronts the confusion and contention around what it means to be Métis. In their new article, "White Settler Revisionism and Making Métis Everywhere: The Evocation of Métissage in Québec and Nova Scotia." Co-authors Adam Gaudry (University of Alberta) and Darryl Leroux (Saint Mary's University) argue that moves by some settler communities to insert a "Métis" identity into places and periods they don't belong—namely, outside the Prairie homelands of the historic Métis Nation—all in an effort to "self-Indigenize," don't just constitute wrong-headed fantasy, but a real and present danger to genuine Indigenous self-determination. // Our theme is 'nesting' by birocratic.

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