Honoring Indigenous Cultures and Histories | Jill Fish | TEDxMinneapolis

TEDx Talks
21 Nov 201816:38

Summary

TLDRJill Fish, a Tuscarora Nation member, discusses the impact of settler colonialism on indigenous narratives and identities. She shares her personal journey and challenges the deficit model of psychology, proposing a reconceptualized ecological systems model that centers culture and history. This model promotes a cultural-strengths-based perspective, encouraging society to acknowledge and validate indigenous histories and cultures.

Takeaways

  • 🌍 **Land Acknowledgement**: Jill Fish begins by acknowledging the Dakota people's traditional homelands and the historical injustices they faced, setting the stage for a discussion on settler colonialism.
  • 🏗️ **Settler Colonialism Defined**: Fish explains settler colonialism as a global phenomenon where a dominant group erases indigenous narratives and replaces them with their own.
  • 📚 **Narratives and Identity**: She emphasizes the importance of narratives in shaping identity and understanding one's past, present, and future.
  • 🚫 **Eradication of Indigenous Narratives**: Fish points out the erasure of indigenous narratives in favor of settler narratives, which denies indigenous people their right to exist.
  • 🧐 **Personal and Cultural Survival**: Jill shares her Tuscarora Nation's history, including their survival and perseverance despite colonization and forced assimilation.
  • 🏡 **Cultural Displacement**: She discusses the personal impact of cultural displacement on her own life and the broader implications for indigenous communities.
  • 🔪 **Psychological Impact**: Fish reveals the deep psychological effects of the deficit model, including self-harm and a sense of invisibility within mainstream society.
  • 🎓 **Educational Disparities**: She highlights the stark educational disparities faced by Native American youth, including lower graduation rates and underrepresentation in higher education.
  • 🌟 **Cultural Strengths Perspective**: Fish introduces the ecological systems model and proposes a reconceptualized version that centers culture and history, moving away from a deficit perspective.
  • 🔄 **Reconceptualizing Models**: By repositioning the chronosystem and macrosystem, Fish's model integrates culture and history into all levels of analysis, challenging the status quo.
  • 🤔 **Self-Reflection and Change**: She concludes by encouraging the audience to reflect on their own roles in perpetuating or challenging settler colonial narratives and to work towards a more inclusive society.

Q & A

  • What is the significance of acknowledging the land and its indigenous history?

    -Acknowledging the land and its indigenous history is important because it recognizes the historical injustices and ongoing impacts of settler colonialism on indigenous peoples. It also helps to understand the context in which indigenous narratives have been marginalized and the need for their recognition and preservation.

  • What is the concept of settler colonialism as described in the script?

    -Settler colonialism is a process where a dominant group displaces an indigenous population, taking over their land and resources. It involves the erasure of indigenous narratives and the imposition of the settlers' own narrative, leading to the marginalization and oppression of the indigenous people.

  • How does the script define narratives and their importance?

    -Narratives are defined as tools that help people understand their identity by telling them where they have been, where they are, and where they might end up. They are crucial for cultural preservation and self-understanding, and the denial of indigenous narratives can be seen as a denial of their right to exist.

  • What challenges does the speaker face as an indigenous person in a settler society?

    -The speaker faces challenges such as cultural erasure, alienation, and a lack of recognition of her history and culture. She also experiences personal struggles like self-hatred and mental health issues, which are exacerbated by the deficit model that portrays indigenous cultures as inferior.

  • What is the deficit model mentioned in the script?

    -The deficit model is a psychological framework that views individuals from different cultural groups as lacking or deficient compared to the dominant culture. It perpetuates the narrative that indigenous cultures and histories are inferior, leading to negative self-perceptions and societal marginalization.

  • Why is the ecological systems model significant in the context of the script?

    -The ecological systems model is significant because it provides a framework for understanding how an individual's development is influenced by their interactions with their environment. The speaker uses this model to critique the deficit perspective and to propose a reconceptualized model that centers indigenous histories and cultures.

  • What changes does the speaker propose to the ecological systems model?

    -The speaker proposes to move the chronosystem to the core of the model and to bring the macrosystem from the outside to the second level. This reorganization is intended to center indigenous histories and cultures in the analysis of development and experiences.

  • How does the reconceptualized ecological systems model challenge the deficit perspective?

    -The reconceptualized model challenges the deficit perspective by forcing an acknowledgment of the historical and cultural factors that shape the experiences of indigenous people. It moves away from viewing individuals as deficient and instead focuses on the ways in which settler society is deficient in meeting the needs of indigenous people.

  • What is the cultural-strengths-based perspective that the speaker advocates for?

    -The cultural-strengths-based perspective is an approach that acknowledges and validates indigenous histories and cultures as strengths rather than deficits. It encourages a shift in paradigms to create more inclusive spaces and institutions that respect and integrate indigenous narratives.

  • What questions should individuals ask themselves to move towards a cultural-strengths-based perspective?

    -Individuals should ask themselves whether their spaces, actions, institutions, and classrooms are structured around settler society, whether they are working to shift paradigms to be more inclusive, and whether they are correcting inaccurate histories and stereotypes. They should also question their own cultural and historical knowledge and its influence on their present-day actions.

  • What does the speaker mean by 'settler society'?

    -Settler society refers to the dominant society that has been established by settlers on indigenous lands. It is characterized by the imposition of the settlers' culture, language, and norms, often at the expense of the indigenous population's culture and history.

Outlines

plate

This section is available to paid users only. Please upgrade to access this part.

Upgrade Now

Mindmap

plate

This section is available to paid users only. Please upgrade to access this part.

Upgrade Now

Keywords

plate

This section is available to paid users only. Please upgrade to access this part.

Upgrade Now

Highlights

plate

This section is available to paid users only. Please upgrade to access this part.

Upgrade Now

Transcripts

plate

This section is available to paid users only. Please upgrade to access this part.

Upgrade Now
Rate This

5.0 / 5 (0 votes)

Related Tags
Indigenous RightsSettler ColonialismCultural ErasureIdentity CrisisHistorical InjusticePsychological ImpactEducational DisparitiesCultural StrengthsEcological Systems ModelSocial Inequality