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Name: Kate Higginson
Email: kate [at] kateh [dot] ca
Tell us something about your level of study and the type of institutional appointment you hold. Choose any of the terms below that apply to you: * undergrad * grad * part-time instructor * pre-tenure faculty member * tenured faculty member * archivist-librarian * independent scholar * creative practitioner * interested citizen
Role: SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow
Institution: Institute for Comparative Studies in Literature, Art & Culture
Field of Study/Creative Endeavor: Canadian and Aboriginal Story, Writing & Visual Culture
Please write a paragraph about your persona as a researcher: your position, your discipline, your general research interests, and the extent to which you use computers in your research. You may wish to mention particular tools that you use with some regularity.
My academic interests include early and contemporary Canadian and Aboriginal literatures; representations of captivity in colonial contact zones (primarily in Turtle Island/North America and Australia); issues of repatriation; visual culture (especially photography); historiography; and aspects of gender, race, and aboriginality in general. My introduction to collaborative humanities computing came a number of years ago as a GRA at Guelph for the Orlando Project.
Please provide a short description of the larger project from which this story emerges.
My doctoral dissertation, “Caught Up: Indigenous Re/presentations of Colonial Captivity,” examined the repression of, recovery of, and Indigenous response to, representations of pathogenic colonial practices of capturing and confining Indigenous peoples in the lands claimed by Canada, the United States, and Australia. My current project turns to a different aspect of Indigenous self-representation: the curative cultural practice of what I am calling “creative repatriation” or the conceptual (non-literal) relocation—through diverse artistic means, self-definition, and/or reference to Indigenous epistemologies—of First Nations items or subjects from (neo)colonial settings back to(wards) their communities of origin. The project aims to augment understandings of art’s value as a vehicle of self-definition, cultural recuperation and decolonization.
In lieu of a single story, I’ll list here a few quite specific research scenarios and challenges I would be keen to see us consider as CWRC develops:
How broadly do the practices described in this story apply to others in same field, in related fields, etc? * broadly applicable * shared by some * shared by few or none
Scope: broadly applicable
Does your story describe current research activities that you think CWRC will enhance (present), or future research possibilities that you can only dream of now? (future)
Timeline: present & future
Please provide some keywords that will allow us to group or cluster related stories--or aspects of stories. Use as many of the ones listed below as relevant or provide your own. * Aggregate * Annotate * Consider * Discover * Interact * Publish * Archive/Preserve * Share * Visualize * Map * Historicize * Edit * Network * Collaborate * Integrated History of Women's Writing in Canada * Orlando
Keywords: annotate, share, map, historicize, visualize, multi-media, indigenize
Are there parts of the story that relate to other CWRC stories? Please provide title(s) and link to the relevant story page.
Related Stories:
Are there tools that do some of the sorts of things you'd like to see in CWRC? If so, what are they?
Related Tools: