Sometimes Clocks Turn Back for Us to Move Forward: Reflections on Black and Indigenous Geographies

Abstract

In the 1950s two kinds of dispossession in Jamaica and British Columbia occurred through a transnational mining operation and remain in the shape of tailings ponds and a smelter- co-constituting a ‘networked isolation’. A quest to reveal the joint impact anchors this ‘contra-histoire’ (Million, 2009) in an attempt bridge the divide between Black Studies and Indigenous Studies (Leroy, 2016). Moving counter-clockwise through time, I weave Black Caribbean and Indigenous literature and academic texts with an embodied sense of geography and belonging to undo what I call ‘the afterlife of an introduction through white colonial disciplinarity’.
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Chambers, N. (2019). Sometimes Clocks Turn Back for Us to Move Forward: Reflections on Black and Indigenous Geographies. Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.33776/candb.v8i1.4566
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