news.library.ualberta.ca
  • BLOG HOME
  • About
    • Author Profiles
    • Five Things You Need to Know About the Library
    • Cinq choses à savoir sur la bibliothèque
  • Collections
  • Community
  • Wellness
  • Français
    • Cinq choses à savoir sur la bibliothèque
news.library.ualberta.ca
  • BLOG HOME
  • About
    • Author Profiles
    • Five Things You Need to Know About the Library
    • Cinq choses à savoir sur la bibliothèque
  • Collections
  • Community
  • Wellness
  • Français
    • Cinq choses à savoir sur la bibliothèque
Community

Indigenous Futurism

by Meredith Bratland July 7, 2021
written by Meredith Bratland July 7, 2021
2 comments
3
FacebookLinkedinRedditWhatsappEmail

Grace Dillon coined the term, Indigenous Futurism, a nod to Afrofuturism, to describe work that is centred around Indigenous people and features their ancient knowledge in a futuristic setting.

“All forms of Indigenous futurisms are narratives of biskaabiiyang, an Anishinaabemowin word connoting the process of ‘returning to ourselves,’ which involves discovering how personally one is affected by colonization, discarding the emotional and psychological baggage carried from its impact, and recovering ancestral traditions in order to adapt in our post-Native Apocalypse world.”

-Grace Dillon, Walking the Clouds: an anthology of Indigenous Science Fiction

Why I’m eager to jump into reading Indigenous Futurism is that it looks at the future and imagines a way forward from colonialism. “Indigenous people have already survived an apocalypse”, says Grace Dillon and this is a statement I find very poignant.

We all will learn tremendously by listening to Indigenous perspectives and knowledge as we plan for the future. Let’s aim to think generations ahead as Indigenous cultures have been doing all along. Indigenous Futurism can help us focus on possibility, justice, joy, and resilience.

Some of UAlberta’s own scholars are big thinkers in the scene of Indigenous Futurism.

Chelsea Vowel – ERA paper and her podcast Metis in Space

  • Here is Vowel’s Master of Arts thesis paper – Where No Michif Has Gone Before: The Form and Functions of Metis Futurisms (in ERA, the university’s online repository)
  • She and Molly Swain (who is also part of the Faculty of Native Studies) host a fab podcast called Metis in Space. http://www.metisinspace.com/

Kim TallBear has been inspiring us at UAlberta and beyond with her wisdom, research, and forward-thinking. She’s teaching a class that I think can be considered Indigenous Futurism:

  • Indigenous Peoples and Technoscience 
    • Taught with professor, Jessica Kolopenuk

For more Grace Dillon, there are a few audio interviews to enjoy:

  • Indigenous Futurisms: Changing the Narrative in Science Fiction and Fact – Spark on CBC
  • From growing medicine to space rockets: What is Indigenous futurism? – Unreserved on CBC

And to finish off, the books on my nightstand:

  • Cherie Dimaline
    • The Marrow Thieves
    • Empire of Wild
  • Trail of Lightning by Rebecca Roanhouse
  • Trickster Trilogy by Eden Robinson
    • Son of a Trickster (#1)
    • Trickster Drift (#2)
    • Return of the Trickster (#3)

There is SO MUCH out there and this is just a sampling based on my own interests and literary taste. Discover where you fit in this great literary canon of knowledge and take it with you, along with hope and positive change.

IndigenousIndigenous History Month 2021
2 comments
3
FacebookLinkedinRedditWhatsappEmail
Meredith Bratland

Meredith is the Strategic Communications Manager for UAlberta Libraries. She dabbles in various creative pursuits from comics to podcasting, linocut to watercolours. She is a snack connoisseur and is addicted to peanut butter m&m’s.

previous post
Spring 2021 Theses in ERA
next post
Science fiction: your next summer read?

You may also like

Asian Heritage Month: Celebration of Asian Cinema

May 6, 2025

University of Alberta Library Wrap Up

April 24, 2025

Explorer nos collections : Découvrez le Bédéiste Fabien...

April 4, 2025

Images of Research Competition and Exhibition Returns For...

April 1, 2025

Media Lab Spotlight: Introducing “Behind the Labs” podcast

March 24, 2025

Journée internationale du bonheur

March 19, 2025

Renforcer la recherche : Comment la bibliothèque de...

March 17, 2025

Explorer nos collections : Biographies de femmes racontées...

March 13, 2025

Days of Action – International Day of Happiness

March 13, 2025

Edmonton Queer History Collection

March 10, 2025

2 comments

Tegan January 17, 2025 - 8:20 am

Here is the proper link to the Métis in Space Podcast https://metisinspace.libsyn.com/

Reply
Elisabet Ingibergsson January 20, 2025 - 2:18 pm

Thank you Tegan! I have updated that. Elisabet

Reply

Leave a Comment Cancel Reply

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

Instagram Corner

No any image found. Please check it again or try with another instagram account.

Categories

  • Collections (238)
    • Borrowing (64)
    • Collection Connection (5)
    • Digital Collections (102)
    • Special Collections (5)
  • Community (428)
    • Awards (15)
    • Events (28)
    • Exhibits (16)
    • News (21)
    • Staff (64)
  • Digital Services (21)
  • Français (146)
  • Wellness (39)
    • Dogs in the Library (5)

BLOG ARCHIVES

About Me

  • Instagram
  • Youtube

@2020- University of Alberta Library
The University of Alberta is situated on traditional Treaty 6 territory and homeland of the Métis peoples. Amiskwaciwâskahikan / ᐊᒥᐢᑲᐧᒋᕀᐋᐧᐢᑲᐦᐃᑲᐣ / Edmonton


Back To Top