DiscoverMEDIA INDIGENA : Indigenous current affairsFrom perogies to pemmican: what can two men switched at birth tell us about Indigenous belonging? (ep 346)
From perogies to pemmican: what can two men switched at birth tell us about Indigenous belonging? (ep 346)

From perogies to pemmican: what can two men switched at birth tell us about Indigenous belonging? (ep 346)

Update: 2024-04-16
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In this back half of our longer-than-expected mini INDIGENA, host/producer Rick Harp picks up where he left off (drinking deeply of coffee, commodity fetishism and character actor Wallace Shawn) with Kim TallBear (University of Alberta professor in the Faculty of Native Studies and Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Peoples, Technoscience and Society) and Candis Callison (UBC Associate Professor in the Institute for Critical Indigenous Studies and the School for Public Policy and Global Affairs), as they discuss:

  • Two men swapped at birth—one Indigenous, one not—receive apology from province
  • a Dutch designer's appropriation of a Navajo word as her company's name sparks fashion flap
  • a B.C. politico decries advisory on provincial website noting that many Indigenous peoples "may not identify with" the term 'British Columbians'

CREDITS: ♬ 'All Your Faustian Bargains' and 'Love Is Chemical' by Steve Combs (CC BY 4.0). Edited by Cassidy Villebrun-Buracas and Rick Harp.

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From perogies to pemmican: what can two men switched at birth tell us about Indigenous belonging? (ep 346)

From perogies to pemmican: what can two men switched at birth tell us about Indigenous belonging? (ep 346)