Defamiliarizing the aboriginal :

"From the Canadian Indian Act to Freud's Totem and Taboo to films such as Nanook of the North, all manner of cultural artefacts were used to create a distinction between savagery and civilization. In Defamiliarizing the Aboriginal , Julia V. Emberley examines the historical production of aboriginality in colonial cultural practices and its effects in shaping the everyday lives of indigenous women, youth, and children. Adopting a materialist-semiotic approach, Emberley explores the ways in which representational technologies, film, photography, and print culture, including legal documents and literature were crucial to British colonial practices. Many indigenous scholars, writers, and artists are, however, confounding these practices by deploying aboriginality as a complex and enabling sign of social, cultural, and political transformation. Emberley gives due attention to this important work, studying a wide range of topics, including race, place, and motherhood, primitivism and violence, and sexuality and global political kinships. Because of Emberley's multidisciplinary approach, Defamiliarizing the Aboriginal will be of interest to scholars and students of cultural studies, indigenous studies, women's studies, postcolonial and colonial studies, literature, and film." - Provided by publisher

Call Number: 
E78 .C2 E515 2007
Title Responsibility: 
Julia V. Emberley.
Author Information: 
Dr. Julia Emberley is a member of the Royal Society of Canada. Her research interests include Indigenous storytelling practices, testimonial discourses, cultural and feminist postcolonial studies and decolonial theory and literatures. She currently holds a SSHRC Insight Grant (2015-19) on the topic of Indigenous Literatures and Decolonization. Her supervision of PhD graduate students includes projects on Indigenous literature in Canada, Arab-American diasporic literatures, intersectionalities between African American literatures and Islamic Texts, and international Indigenous literatures. She is an adjunct professor in the Center for Transition Justice and Post-Conflict Reconstruction, the Department of Women’s Studies and Gender Research and the Comparative Literature Department. Her latest book is The Testimonial Uncanny: Indigenous Storytelling, Knowledge and Reparative Practices (SUNY 2014; pbk 2015).
Production Place: 
Toronto :
Producer: 
University of Toronto Press,
Production Date: 
c2007.
Band Tribe Geography Time: 
Multiple Nations
Catalogue Key: 
6077735