Bringing context and critique to the cultural moment. Deep dives, reviews, and debate encouraged.
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© 2020 Relevant Protocols Inc.
Bringing context and critique to the cultural moment. Deep dives, reviews, and debate encouraged.
40652 Members
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© 2020 Relevant Protocols Inc.
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A Conversation about Indigenous Futurisms with Grace Dillon and Pedro Neves Marques. "Dillon talks about key concepts within Indigenous-led science fiction and offers a genealogy of the term “Indigenous Futurisms,” going back to authors like Gerald Vizenor and Diane Glancy; in doing this she provides a precious bibliography at a time when some of the most exciting science fiction writing today is coming from nonwhite authors. She considers stories with topics ranging from technology, environmental justice, and relations between human and other-than-human creatures, showing that thinking with science fiction offers a rich path to decolonize the notion of science itself, freeing up space for political imaginations beyond a one-world future."
A Conversation about Indigenous Futurisms with Grace Dillon and Pedro Neves Marques. "Dillon talks about key concepts within Indigenous-led science fiction and offers a genealogy of the term “Indigenous Futurisms,” going back to authors like Gerald Vizenor and Diane Glancy; in doing this she provides a precious bibliography at a time when some of the most exciting science fiction writing today is coming from nonwhite authors. She considers stories with topics ranging from technology, environmental justice, and relations between human and other-than-human creatures, showing that thinking with science fiction offers a rich path to decolonize the notion of science itself, freeing up space for political imaginations beyond a one-world future."
An interview with Grace Dillon, an Anishinaabe cultural critic, professor in Indigenous Nations Studies at Portland State University about her book ‘Walking the Clouds’ and Indigenous Futurisms eg Native slipstream; Contact; Indigenous science and sustainability; Native apocalypse; Biskaabiiyang, meaning “Returning to Ourselves.” and climate justice.
An interview with Grace Dillon, an Anishinaabe cultural critic, professor in Indigenous Nations Studies at Portland State University about her book ‘Walking the Clouds’ and Indigenous Futurisms eg Native slipstream; Contact; Indigenous science and sustainability; Native apocalypse; Biskaabiiyang, meaning “Returning to Ourselves.” and climate justice.
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