Reference no: EM133663140
Question: You are asked to create a reflection on a "critical encounter" with your "environment". When you start paying attention to your environment, you notice new things. 5 hundred word reflection on something you encountered in your environment, on separate days throughout the term, in the weeks this activity is assigned. Begin by consulting the guiding questions for this week's submission and then describe what you "encountered" in relation to these questions - a song, tweet, film, book, conversation, an event in your neighborhood, a thought, etc. and clearly connect this to course materials - themes, concepts and readings from the course (making links is essential to pass!), which could mean thinking in an intersectional way about this encounter, its implications for you, for others, for the community, etc., how this encounter shapes the environment in which you (or others) live, in what ways, and why; what gives rise to or informs this encounter, what history, social relations, power dynamics, etc? Cite readings in - MLA - format where applicable. If appropriate, provide a link to whatever you're discussing;
Indigenous Knowledge, Worldviews and Ways of Life: In a general sense, how do Indigenous worldviews and forms of life approach the environment, nature, and women, and how does this contrast with Western society? How does colonization and the expansion of capitalism undermine Indigenous worldviews, form of life and the natural world? How is this connected to environmental (in)justice? What are some important concepts, and historical and present day issues here?
Robin Wall Kimmerer, "Skywoman Falling," in Braiding: Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teaching of Plants (Minnesota: Milkweed Editions 2013), 3-10.
Deborah McGregor, "Honoring Our Relations: An Anishnaabe Perspective on Environmental Justice," in Speaking for Ourselves: Environmental Justice in Canada, edited by Agyeman, J. et al. (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2009), 27-41.
Alex Wilson, "Our Coming In Stories: Cree Identity, Body Sovereignty and Gender Self-Determination," Journal of Global Indigeneity, 1, 1 (2015), 1-5.
Leanne Simpson, "Listening to Our Ancestors: Rebuilding Indigenous Nations in the Face of Environmental Destruction," in Every Grain of Sand: Canadian Perspectives on Ecology and Environment. J. Andrew Wainwrite, editor (Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier Press, 2004), 121-135.