Part 2: The beginning of an Analysis of Settler Colonialism Emerges at AMC 2022
“Part 2: The beginning of an Analysis of Settler Colonialism Emerges at AMC 2022,” an Outcome archive entry by Sarah Nahar. The entry belongs to the featured collection and connects readers to scholarship, public history, and organizing around the Doctrine of Discovery, Christian domination, Indigenous sovereignty, law, religion, land, memory, and accountability.
In brief, it addresses In the 1600s when enslaved Africans disembarked en masse and travel weary to this land mass, they arrived in a place where hundreds of Indigenous groups lived since. For readers arriving from the main Doctrine of Discovery site, this post functions as a pointer rather than a replacement for the full Outcome record. The canonical page preserves the complete context, metadata, author information, citation links, media, and neighboring materials in the archive.
The source text highlights terms and contexts including Introduction In the 1600s when enslaved Africans disembarked en masse and travel weary to this land mass , they arrived in a place where hundreds of Indigenous groups lived since time immemorial.[1] Since that moment The majority of the interactions between Black people and Indigenous Peoples living in the so called United States occur(red) in the bloody context of settler colonial imperialism. Black people were kidnapped, trafficked, enslaved, segregated, imprisoned, and assassinated by individuals and a system that did not value our personhood, but sought to exploit our bodies and souls.[2] Indigenous peoples were (and continue to be) exploited,. Read the canonical Outcome page for the complete entry.
Canonical link: https://outcome.doctrineofdiscovery.org/featured/essay2/beginning-analysis-settler-colonialism/
SUGGESTED CITATION
Adam DJ Brett, "Part 2: The beginning of an Analysis of Settler Colonialism Emerges at AMC 2022," Doctrine of Discovery Project (19 November 2024), https://doctrineofdiscovery.org/blog/link/outcome/featured/essay2/beginning-analysis-settler-colonialism/.
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