Michael
Marker
Educational Studies, Director of Ts'kel
First Nations Studies, UBC
Musqueam territory
My work is in ethnohistory of education
and explores the relational knowledge of First Peoples in the
Coastal Salish region and the ways that colonizing powers have
imposed ideologies and cosmologies with destructive results.
My work examines the ways that the historic themes of colliding
worldviews and relationships to land continue to be animated
by the denial of culture and the hidden curriculum of both schooling
and media. My writing examines the varieties of forms and structures
which neutralize a legitimate Indigenous voice and cast the polemical
cultural Other as an exoticized outside case scenario. My assertion
is that healing and relationship building can only come of a
rigorous unmasking of stereotypes, historical amnesia, and the
North American mainstream culture of denial.
Recent works:
Indigenous Voice and Epistemic Violence:
The Ethnographer's Short and Selective Attention Span. International
Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (Forthcoming)
After the Makah Whalehunt: Culture and
Ecology Up Against the Classroom Wall. Under review by Educational
Researcher.