Litcius/Paper detail

Mapping (as) Resistance: Decolonizing↔Indigenizing Journalistic Cartography

Greg Lowan-Trudeau

2021Media+Environment11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article considers journalistic cartography in relation to socioecological disasters in Indigenous territories and associated resistance movements. The authority of Western-style maps as presented in news media and elsewhere is often taken for granted—colonial cartography exerts powerful, typically unquestioned, influence upon peoples’ understandings of cultural geographies and associated land-based relationships. Such dynamics are particularly germane to consideration of Indigenous environmental and territorial concerns and associated resistance actions across Turtle Island / North America and elsewhere around the world. I present Indigenous mapping traditions and contemporary cartographic interventions as inspiring counterexamples for shifting public narratives and understanding of Indigenous territories, environmental knowledge, and related issues within news media and beyond.

Topics & Concepts

IndigenousResistance (ecology)NarrativeGeographyColonialismRelation (database)Environmental ethicsSociologyArchaeologyEcologyArtBiologyPhilosophyComputer scienceLiteratureDatabaseIndigenous Studies and EcologyGeographies of human-animal interactionsIndigenous Health, Education, and Rights