Unsettling the Settler: An Arts-Based Exploration
Abstract
:1. Introduction and Context
- start with a personal exploration of one’s own positionality and privilege(s) or barriers;
- be open to learning more about something you may only have a general knowledge of;
- be prepared to individually and collectively explore the topic/issue through the available texts (through reading, conversation and embodied explorations such as books, news articles, and survivor testimonies), and to listen to these texts (and one another); and
- actively work to co-create scenes/dialogues around the topics/issues that the individuals and the group need to learn about/explore, as a way to start dialogue and learning.
2. Arts-Based Educational Research
3. Arts-Based Exploration: Monologue
Unsettling the Settler
Actor stands in the center of the stage, hands by her side and looks directly at the audience. She is wearing a suit and her hair is pulled back tightly in a bun or low ponytail. She wears pearls.
(She pantomimes her feet are glued to the floor and she is using all of her energy to try and get one of them to move off of the ground in order to take a step forward. Screaming, she finally collapses to the floor, but her feet are still planted in the same place. She begins to cry, but ends up laughing at the futility of the situation).
(She looks down and tries once more to move her feet, but can’t).
(She looks up at the audience and realizes she has been screaming again and begins to apologize).
(She interacts with the audience until they begin to nod in agreement and launches into one of her lectures on social responsibility—or something impressive).
(She sits down on a chair someone brought out when she was talking about phenomenology).
(She “goes through the steps of “discovering” the chair as if for the first time, as she just described).
Sings:
Altogether now, Grey skies are going to clear up! Put on a happy face. Wipe off those tears and cheer up! Put on a happy face. Wipe off that face of tragedy, it’s not your style, and put on a happy face…(the last note is drawn out for a long time, as Carter tap dances her way to a grand finale).
How can the people who inflict the pain ever really be forgiven, if they don’t really truly understand how it feels?
(the child who brought out the chair returns and smiles holding out a hand. She looks down at her arm).
4. Analysis: Unpacking the Monologue
Maybe we re-write this story together and the pain and the joy, and the being stuck and unstuck are all just parts of the larger narrative we learn to tell.
Maybe those stories I don’t want to be mine, that I feel ashamed to tell, are trying to tell me something. And it’s hard to listen to them, and to accept that they are mine. But, maybe my stories are trying to teach me that the journey of truth and reconciliation needs to start with me, and that’s the only story I can tell.
Open up the scars and to dig out the poison that lays inside. That hurt and painful experience that has been laying there for so long (She begins to pick at her arm trying to dig out the “poison”). I know it’s there. I know its sitting just beneath the surface. But its pooled there in a spot and If you don’t touch it it can’t spread everywhere again. See? SEE? The scar? Its healed, as much as it can.
- I began with my personal exploration of my positionality, privilege(s) and barriers, as the character in this monologue literally and figuratively goes from a “stuck” person with pearls, hair tightly wound, and uncomfortable heels to someone who names their own fears and trauma in order to let their power go (i.e., being abandoned as a child and growing up in poverty).
- I had to confront the fact that I had to learn and grow as a result of what I was researching (i.e., to be open to learning more about something I may only have a general knowledge of) because the research participants were going deeper into their engagement with the TRC, systemic racism in Canada, and anti-oppressive language. In order for me to honour and listen to the stories of my participants, I also had to learn and grow and listen (i.e., “do the work”).
- I had to individually read more books and texts on race, racism, anti-oppression and anti-oppressive language; then, I had to participate in reading groups and bring these conversations into my own classes.
5. Reflections
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Carter, M.R. Unsettling the Settler: An Arts-Based Exploration. Societies 2022, 12, 46. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12020046
Carter MR. Unsettling the Settler: An Arts-Based Exploration. Societies. 2022; 12(2):46. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12020046
Chicago/Turabian StyleCarter, Mindy R. 2022. "Unsettling the Settler: An Arts-Based Exploration" Societies 12, no. 2: 46. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12020046
APA StyleCarter, M. R. (2022). Unsettling the Settler: An Arts-Based Exploration. Societies, 12(2), 46. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12020046