Kinship is not a metaphor

IF 1.1 Q2 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY Settler Colonial Studies Pub Date : 2022-06-01 DOI:10.1080/2201473X.2022.2077901
Keavy Martin
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Indigenous oral histories say that Treaty No. 6 (1876) was not only a legal transaction but rather a ceremony of adoption whereby incoming settler peoples became relatives. With Indigenous theories of relationality now informing many disciplines, how do white settler peoples take up the framework of kinship without using it only as a metaphor—and thereby as yet another tool of settler-colonial displacement? This essay examines this risk by considering the figurative use of kinship terms by Commissioner Alexander Morris at the negotiations for Treaty No. 6, in what is now Saskatchewan, Canada. Morris’s reliance on a borrowed vocabulary of kinship was, like his participation in the ceremony of the sacred pipestem, an invocation of relationality as a rhetorical device aimed at securing the ‘surrender’ of the lands. While metaphor is a figure that can mislead, coerce, or yoke, however, it can also make relationships, make things akin. In light of the continued relevance of the Indigenous legal framework known as treaty, this discussion takes up the possibility of kinship metaphors as not only figurative but also as literal, binding, and central to the possibility of good relations in the prairies today.
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亲属关系不是一个隐喻
土著口述历史表明,第6号条约(1876年)不仅是一项法律交易,而且是一种收养仪式,通过这种仪式,外来定居者成为亲戚。随着土著居民的关系理论现在影响了许多学科,白人定居者如何接受亲属关系的框架,而不把它仅仅作为一种隐喻——从而作为另一种移民-殖民地流离失所的工具?本文通过考虑专员亚历山大·莫里斯(Alexander Morris)在谈判第6号条约(现为加拿大萨斯喀彻温省)时对亲属关系术语的比喻使用来考察这种风险。莫里斯对借来的亲属词汇的依赖,就像他参与神圣管道仪式一样,是对关系的一种召唤,作为一种修辞手段,旨在确保土地的“投降”。虽然隐喻是一种可以误导、强迫或束缚的形象,但它也可以建立关系,使事物相似。鉴于被称为条约的土著法律框架的持续相关性,本讨论讨论了亲属隐喻的可能性,它不仅是象征性的,而且是字面上的,具有约束力的,并且是当今草原上良好关系可能性的核心。
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来源期刊
Settler Colonial Studies
Settler Colonial Studies SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
11.10%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: The journal aims to establish settler colonial studies as a distinct field of scholarly research. Scholars and students will find and contribute to historically-oriented research and analyses covering contemporary issues. We also aim to present multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary research, involving areas like history, law, genocide studies, indigenous, colonial and postcolonial studies, anthropology, historical geography, economics, politics, sociology, international relations, political science, literary criticism, cultural and gender studies and philosophy.
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