ANTH 2222 6.0 - From Settler Colonialism to Multiculturalism: Study Away
How do we live and interact with others in multicultural and multiracial communities in Canada? What is the relationship between settler colonialism and multiculturalism? What is the future of multiculturalism? This study away course is a critical study of colonialism, settler colonialism, multiculturalism, and Canadian nation-making by attending to: (a) the politics of elimination, assimilation, and recognition of Indigenous presence; (b) settler colonial institutions that have sustained racialized and social hierarchies in Canada, and (c) historical and contemporary interactions between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people.
We will draw upon the work of scholars, community leaders, and artists that critique celebratory perspectives of multiculturalism to identify emerging forms of knowledges and practices that interrogate multicultural values of recognition, tolerance and welcome.
Students will travel to Vancouver, British Columbia where they will experience guided tours of historically Black and Asian neighborhoods, activities involving land stewardship with xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam Nation), site visits to Japanese internment camp memorials, and much more! Students will critically engage with memorials, monuments, and convivial multicultural places to untangle the fraught relationship between public memory, “truth” and reconciliation.
Quick Links
Applications for Summer 2024 have now closed.
Location: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Course Dates:
July 8 - 24 at York University; July 29 – August 12, 2024, in British Columbia, Canada
Course Director:
Prof. Lisa Davidson, Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology.
Maximum Enrolment: 16 Students
Learn More
For more information, students can connect with LA&PS Study Abroad Coordinator (studyabr@yorku.ca).