
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


ON THIS EPISODE: part four of 'the White Possessive,' the latest in our five-part series on the seminar, "Sovereignty First: Tackling the White Possessive in an Era of 'Collaboration.'" Based on a presentation about pretendianism by Kim TallBear (Professor of American Indian Studies at University of Minnesota–Twin Cities), she joins fellow MI roundtabler Candis Callison (Professor in the Institute for Critical Indigenous Studies and School for Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia) and host/producer Rick Harp to discuss what makes settler self-indigenization—where colonial cosplay works to both emulate and eliminate the Indian—arguably the final frontier of white possessiveness.
CREDITS: Our intro/extro theme is 'nesting' by birocratic; 'Slow Me Down' by Jangwa; 'Magnetic' by 1000 Handz (CC BY).
By Rick Harp4.9
126126 ratings
ON THIS EPISODE: part four of 'the White Possessive,' the latest in our five-part series on the seminar, "Sovereignty First: Tackling the White Possessive in an Era of 'Collaboration.'" Based on a presentation about pretendianism by Kim TallBear (Professor of American Indian Studies at University of Minnesota–Twin Cities), she joins fellow MI roundtabler Candis Callison (Professor in the Institute for Critical Indigenous Studies and School for Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia) and host/producer Rick Harp to discuss what makes settler self-indigenization—where colonial cosplay works to both emulate and eliminate the Indian—arguably the final frontier of white possessiveness.
CREDITS: Our intro/extro theme is 'nesting' by birocratic; 'Slow Me Down' by Jangwa; 'Magnetic' by 1000 Handz (CC BY).

90,971 Listeners

43,577 Listeners

398 Listeners

219 Listeners

1,163 Listeners

124 Listeners

88 Listeners

14,944 Listeners

2 Listeners

2,222 Listeners

241 Listeners

452 Listeners

2,991 Listeners

1 Listeners

4 Listeners