Emily Turner is a PhD Candidate at the University of Edinburgh looking at mission architecture in the Canadian North during the nineteenth century. Her research focuses on how architecture was used as an evangelical strategy to assimilate indigenous people and create changes in the landscape and environment. She is also interested in the fusion of indigenous and non-indigenous architectural traditions in the global context, particularly in encouter scenarios, and Arctic community development and settlement.
Sessions auxquelles Emily Turner participe
Jeudi 25 Mai, 2017
Fuseau horaire: (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
9:00 AM
9:00 AM -
10:30 AM |
1 heure 30 minutes
As a marker within territory, architecture stakes a claim over that territory on behalf of those who design and build. In Canada, this dynamic inscribed colonial powers onto the land in the wake of Indigenous dispossession, and this architecture is often celebrated as reflective of settler nationhood. Yet other architectures also emerge out of this colonial past: those specifically constructed to further Canada’s attempts to assimilate First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities into the do...