Racial Necrogeographies and the Making of White Space: The Life and Death of Nineteenth-Century Indigenous and Black Burial Places in Rural Ontario

Looks at burial sites desecrated by settlers, how these acts represent an attempt to erase Indigenous and Black existence, and how these communities have pushed back by reclaiming and reconsecrating their scared places.
Author/Creator
William Felepchuk
Open Access
Yes
Primary Source
No
Citation
American Indian Culture and Research Journal, vol. 43, no. 2, 2019, pp. 73-87
Publication Date
2019
Resource Type
Articles -- Scholarly, peer reviewed
Format
Text -- PDF
Language
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