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Can the Sled Dog Sleep? Postcolonialism, Cultural Transformation and the Consumption of Inuit Culture

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Author(s)
Frank James Tester
Contributor(s)
The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Keywords
Inuit
sled dogs
truth commission
commodity
labour
postcolonialism
Spivak
Bhabha
Sartre
Fanon
capitalism
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Metadata
Perlihat publikasi penuh
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/1031974
Online Access
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.842.2285
http://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/newproposals/article/download/457/1867/
Abstract
ABSTRACT: This paper deals with the application of postcolonial theory to a commission of enquiry into the colonial history of Inuit in the Qikiqtani (Baffin) Region of Nunavut Territory. While the colonial history of the period 1950-1980 has been the focus of the commission, much attention has been directed at the fate of Inuit sled dogs. There are many reasons for this focus. If anything typifies the movement of Inuit from a world impregnated with ritual, relationship and meaning to one of impersonal, secular commodity relations, the fate of Inuit sled dogs is it. The replacement of the sled dog with the snow machine—what Sartre would call a ‘practico-inert ’ manifestation of dead, and in this case imported, labour—was as existentially significant an act as one could imagine. The use of postcolonial theory in examining these transformations is explored. How the commodity has been treated (or largely ignored) by postcolonial theorists is exam-ined and the claim made that in much postcolonial theorizing, the transformation from cultural to commodity forms, the role of the commodity, the nature of consumption and the role of community in the transformation from one form of capitalist production (and the logic that accompanies it) have often been overlooked, underplayed or aligned with what is heralded as fresh theoretical turf in an undeserving, celebratory way. Reference is made to the work of Spivak, Bhabha, Said, Derrida and precursors to postcolonial theory, particularly the work of Jean-Paul Sartre and Franz Fanon.
Date
2016-09-04
Type
text
Identifier
oai:CiteSeerX.psu:10.1.1.842.2285
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.842.2285
Copyright/License
Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it.
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