Walking Unsettling Depremacy: A Preliminary Proposition for Questioning the Right to Go Anywhere.:

dc.date.accessioned2025-09-29T16:22:04Z
dc.date.available2025-09-29T16:22:04Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.description.abstractAs an expression of the “right to go anywhere” (Gill, Head and Waitt 2009, 45), walking or hiking in settler states, particularly on recreational infrastructures such as the Trans Canada Trail, can be understood to support a form of white settler emplacement that is contingent on Indigenous displacement (Tuck and McKenzie 2014). These infrastructures and activities also contribute to assumptions of settler-state sovereignty over Indigenous lands common to the contemporary settler colonial project. In this paper I consider these conditions alongside artsbased methodologies I have developed from a critical white settler perspective to reveal, challenge and subvert them. A discussion of my video, l i s t e n, demonstrates how one such methodology, unsettling depremacy, critically contends with specific interactions with place. I conclude by proposing walking unsettling depremacy as methodology in development that can be deployed to interfere with the ways white settler walking and its recreational infrastructures assert colonial claim.
dc.format.extent29 pp.
dc.format.mediumPDF
dc.identifierlocal:
dc.identifier.othernscad:11106
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14663/1532
dc.languageeng
dc.language.isoiso639-2b
dc.rightsItems in the NSCAD repository are protected by copyright and made available for research and private study use only.
dc.subject------
dc.titleWalking Unsettling Depremacy: A Preliminary Proposition for Questioning the Right to Go Anywhere.:
dc.typeText

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