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How can we read colonial sources to see greater agency, power, and leadership from Indigenous women? or, how can we read colonial sources to see greater ogimaa? How can flipping the perspective and foregrounding these stories challenge how we understand the past and present?
Join Dr. Kai Minosh Pyle (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) as they discuss how we can use sources written by white settlers to read between the lines and see more full lives of Indigenous people, women, and LGBTQ2S+ people.
Using “A Narrative of the Captivity and Adventures of John Tanner” or “The Falcon,” Dr. Pyle discusses passages that showcase the leadership and power of Indigenous women, including a woman who may be identified as a Two-Spirited person. We talk about the ways history has been written and interpreted to privilege certain versions of power and the ways flipping the perspective of historical sources can challenge the Euro-colonial progress narratives so common in Canadian history.
Learn more about Histoire Source | Source Story and connect with us: http://www.sourcestory.ca/
How can we read colonial sources to see greater agency, power, and leadership from Indigenous women? or, how can we read colonial sources to see greater ogimaa? How can flipping the perspective and foregrounding these stories challenge how we understand the past and present?
Join Dr. Kai Minosh Pyle (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) as they discuss how we can use sources written by white settlers to read between the lines and see more full lives of Indigenous people, women, and LGBTQ2S+ people.
Using “A Narrative of the Captivity and Adventures of John Tanner” or “The Falcon,” Dr. Pyle discusses passages that showcase the leadership and power of Indigenous women, including a woman who may be identified as a Two-Spirited person. We talk about the ways history has been written and interpreted to privilege certain versions of power and the ways flipping the perspective of historical sources can challenge the Euro-colonial progress narratives so common in Canadian history.
Learn more about Histoire Source | Source Story and connect with us: http://www.sourcestory.ca/