Trina Cooper-Bolam | Concordia University (Canada) (original) (raw)

Uploads

Papers by Trina Cooper-Bolam

Research paper thumbnail of On the Call for a Residential Schools National Monument

Journal of Canadian Studies, 2018

In its final report, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada called “… upon the federal... more In its final report, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada called “… upon the federal government, in collaboration with Survivors and their organizations, and other parties to the Settlement Agreement, to commission and install a publicly accessible, highly visible, Residential Schools National Monument in the city of Ottawa to honour Survivors and all the children who were lost to their families and communities.” As we reckon with this “call to action” number 81, and bear witness to recent and ongoing public repudiation of contentious monuments, it becomes apparent that the logic of such a monument must be questioned. On the surface, it would appear that a counter or therapeutic monument (for which we have models) might best suit call 81’s objectives. I argue that the 144 Indigenous-led commemoration projects funded through the Indian Residential Schools Settlement, which reflect contemporary Indigenous commemorative approaches, forms, and practices for remembering and ...

Research paper thumbnail of Healing Heritage: New Approaches to Commemorating Canada’s Indian Residential School System

Research paper thumbnail of Mnemonic Fakery and Other Interpretive Strategies: Reclaiming Shingwauk Hall through Ethical Spectacle

Public

Providing a glimpse of the ongoing wrestle with ethics and practice involved in the Reclaiming Sh... more Providing a glimpse of the ongoing wrestle with ethics and practice involved in the Reclaiming Shingwauk Hall exhibition, an iterative residential school Survivor-led reclamation project, this article considers critical methods for implementing museal projects reckoning with difficult knowledge, and the ethical latitude they require. Doing so, it discusses risks of misrepresentation/recognition and the necessity of hopeful wounding, exposing the manipulations, fakery, and the prosthetic memories that exhibitions with great affective force produce. Exploring a range of exhibition-focused museal strategies that seek both to redress and prevent the recurrence of genocide and mass violence, this article articulates the tensions between i) affective power and cultural safety, ii) absence and presence, and iii) prosthetic and “authentic” memory that permeate the process of exhibition design. Returning to the evidentiary landscape of the Shingwauk Indian Residential School, interventions h...

Research paper thumbnail of Workhouses and residential schools

Cybercartography in a Reconciliation Community - Engaging Intersecting Perspectives

Research paper thumbnail of Claiming the Terrible Gift–A Post-TRC Investigation in Praxiological Museology

Research paper thumbnail of Journal of Canadian Studies • Revue d'études canadiennes On the Call for a Residential Schools National Monument

On the Call for a Residential Schools National Monument, 2018

In its final report, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada called "… upon the federal... more In its final report, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada called "… upon the federal government, in collaboration with Survivors and their organizations, and other parties to the Settlement Agreement, to commission and install a publicly accessible, highly visible, Residential Schools National Monument in the city of Ottawa to honour Survivors and all the children who were lost to their families and communities." As we reckon with this "call to action" number 81, and bear witness to recent and ongoing public repudiation of contentious monu­ ments, it becomes apparent that the logic of such a monument must be questioned. On the sur­ face, it would appear that a counter or therapeutic monument (for which we have models) might best suit call 81's objectives. I argue that the 144 Indigenous-led commemoration projects funded through the Indian Residential Schools Settlement, which reflect contemporary Indigenous commemorative approaches, forms, and practices for remembering and healing from traumatic pasts and their ongoing legacies, are those most relevant to the Residential Schools National Monument project. They can inform its process, design, siting, and programming, which may enable it to resist, counter, redefine, and perhaps even decolonize the "national monument." In this article, I both critique call 81 and seek to contribute to this possibility. Résumé : Dans son rapport final, la Commission de vérité et réconciliation du Canada a demandé « […] au gouvernement fédéral, en collaboration avec les survivants et leurs organisations de

Research paper thumbnail of Healing Heritage: New Approaches to Commemorating Canada’s Indian Residential School System

In anticipation of the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, this th... more In anticipation of the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of
Canada, this thesis examines Canada’s federal place-based heritage infrastructure and
critiques the policy and practice of the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada
(HSMBC) relative to its engagements with the history of Indian residential schools (IRS)
and difficult heritage in general. Interpreting IRS Survivor-led commemoration and
heritage practices as healing and decolonizing, and drawing on art-as-resistance and
social activism-oriented models of commemoration and counter-commemoration, I
examine alternative approaches to collective remembering and forgetting within the
context of genocide, atrocity, and historic trauma. I argue for a needed shift from
dominant heritage paradigms that bind heritage with conservation, to emergent
approaches that recognize heritage as a healing practice. In conclusion, I present a series
of recommendations to move toward bridging the gap between state practices of heritage,
and the needs of Survivors and other IRS stakeholders.

Research paper thumbnail of History-making in the Museum: Toward Nurturing Public Historical Practice

Conferences by Trina Cooper-Bolam

Research paper thumbnail of Preventing Fears: Of Reassuring Didactic Pictures, Pastel Colors and Evasion Techniques in Communication about Medicine

ID-Net Conference “Fears and Anxieties in the 21st Century: Special Focus Testimony”, Mansfield C... more ID-Net Conference “Fears and Anxieties in the 21st Century: Special Focus Testimony”, Mansfield College, Oxford, Sept. 2016

Chapters by Trina Cooper-Bolam

Research paper thumbnail of Chapter 7 - Workhouses and Residential Schools: From Institutional Models to Museums

Cybercartography in a Reconciliation Community: Engaging Intersecting Perspectives, 2019

Can institutions that were once models for Indian residential schools become models for a reconci... more Can institutions that were once models for Indian residential schools become models for a reconciliatory museology? That industrial schools were models for Canada’s Indian residential school system is well documented. Their common provenance in the workhouse, however, is less so. This chapter investigates comparative emergent reconciliatory museologies at the Irish Workhouse Centre in Portumna, East Galway, Ireland, and The Workhouse (National Trust site) in Southwell, Nottinghamshire, UK. In this chapter, I investigate how the musealization of these sites can inform the Reclaiming Shingwauk Hall project, an effort to transform the former Shingwauk Indian Residential School in Sault Ste-Marie, Ontario, into a museal site. In studying the synergies between these projects, I seek to contribute to both bridging a gap in our understanding of the provenance of Indian residential schooling in Canada, and to the framing of a needed Canadian and transcultural and transnational reconciliatory museology.

Research paper thumbnail of On the Call for a Residential Schools National Monument

Journal of Canadian Studies, 2018

In its final report, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada called “… upon the federal... more In its final report, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada called “… upon the federal government, in collaboration with Survivors and their organizations, and other parties to the Settlement Agreement, to commission and install a publicly accessible, highly visible, Residential Schools National Monument in the city of Ottawa to honour Survivors and all the children who were lost to their families and communities.” As we reckon with this “call to action” number 81, and bear witness to recent and ongoing public repudiation of contentious monuments, it becomes apparent that the logic of such a monument must be questioned. On the surface, it would appear that a counter or therapeutic monument (for which we have models) might best suit call 81’s objectives. I argue that the 144 Indigenous-led commemoration projects funded through the Indian Residential Schools Settlement, which reflect contemporary Indigenous commemorative approaches, forms, and practices for remembering and ...

Research paper thumbnail of Healing Heritage: New Approaches to Commemorating Canada’s Indian Residential School System

Research paper thumbnail of Mnemonic Fakery and Other Interpretive Strategies: Reclaiming Shingwauk Hall through Ethical Spectacle

Public

Providing a glimpse of the ongoing wrestle with ethics and practice involved in the Reclaiming Sh... more Providing a glimpse of the ongoing wrestle with ethics and practice involved in the Reclaiming Shingwauk Hall exhibition, an iterative residential school Survivor-led reclamation project, this article considers critical methods for implementing museal projects reckoning with difficult knowledge, and the ethical latitude they require. Doing so, it discusses risks of misrepresentation/recognition and the necessity of hopeful wounding, exposing the manipulations, fakery, and the prosthetic memories that exhibitions with great affective force produce. Exploring a range of exhibition-focused museal strategies that seek both to redress and prevent the recurrence of genocide and mass violence, this article articulates the tensions between i) affective power and cultural safety, ii) absence and presence, and iii) prosthetic and “authentic” memory that permeate the process of exhibition design. Returning to the evidentiary landscape of the Shingwauk Indian Residential School, interventions h...

Research paper thumbnail of Workhouses and residential schools

Cybercartography in a Reconciliation Community - Engaging Intersecting Perspectives

Research paper thumbnail of Claiming the Terrible Gift–A Post-TRC Investigation in Praxiological Museology

Research paper thumbnail of Journal of Canadian Studies • Revue d'études canadiennes On the Call for a Residential Schools National Monument

On the Call for a Residential Schools National Monument, 2018

In its final report, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada called "… upon the federal... more In its final report, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada called "… upon the federal government, in collaboration with Survivors and their organizations, and other parties to the Settlement Agreement, to commission and install a publicly accessible, highly visible, Residential Schools National Monument in the city of Ottawa to honour Survivors and all the children who were lost to their families and communities." As we reckon with this "call to action" number 81, and bear witness to recent and ongoing public repudiation of contentious monu­ ments, it becomes apparent that the logic of such a monument must be questioned. On the sur­ face, it would appear that a counter or therapeutic monument (for which we have models) might best suit call 81's objectives. I argue that the 144 Indigenous-led commemoration projects funded through the Indian Residential Schools Settlement, which reflect contemporary Indigenous commemorative approaches, forms, and practices for remembering and healing from traumatic pasts and their ongoing legacies, are those most relevant to the Residential Schools National Monument project. They can inform its process, design, siting, and programming, which may enable it to resist, counter, redefine, and perhaps even decolonize the "national monument." In this article, I both critique call 81 and seek to contribute to this possibility. Résumé : Dans son rapport final, la Commission de vérité et réconciliation du Canada a demandé « […] au gouvernement fédéral, en collaboration avec les survivants et leurs organisations de

Research paper thumbnail of Healing Heritage: New Approaches to Commemorating Canada’s Indian Residential School System

In anticipation of the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, this th... more In anticipation of the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of
Canada, this thesis examines Canada’s federal place-based heritage infrastructure and
critiques the policy and practice of the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada
(HSMBC) relative to its engagements with the history of Indian residential schools (IRS)
and difficult heritage in general. Interpreting IRS Survivor-led commemoration and
heritage practices as healing and decolonizing, and drawing on art-as-resistance and
social activism-oriented models of commemoration and counter-commemoration, I
examine alternative approaches to collective remembering and forgetting within the
context of genocide, atrocity, and historic trauma. I argue for a needed shift from
dominant heritage paradigms that bind heritage with conservation, to emergent
approaches that recognize heritage as a healing practice. In conclusion, I present a series
of recommendations to move toward bridging the gap between state practices of heritage,
and the needs of Survivors and other IRS stakeholders.

Research paper thumbnail of History-making in the Museum: Toward Nurturing Public Historical Practice

Research paper thumbnail of Preventing Fears: Of Reassuring Didactic Pictures, Pastel Colors and Evasion Techniques in Communication about Medicine

ID-Net Conference “Fears and Anxieties in the 21st Century: Special Focus Testimony”, Mansfield C... more ID-Net Conference “Fears and Anxieties in the 21st Century: Special Focus Testimony”, Mansfield College, Oxford, Sept. 2016

Research paper thumbnail of Chapter 7 - Workhouses and Residential Schools: From Institutional Models to Museums

Cybercartography in a Reconciliation Community: Engaging Intersecting Perspectives, 2019

Can institutions that were once models for Indian residential schools become models for a reconci... more Can institutions that were once models for Indian residential schools become models for a reconciliatory museology? That industrial schools were models for Canada’s Indian residential school system is well documented. Their common provenance in the workhouse, however, is less so. This chapter investigates comparative emergent reconciliatory museologies at the Irish Workhouse Centre in Portumna, East Galway, Ireland, and The Workhouse (National Trust site) in Southwell, Nottinghamshire, UK. In this chapter, I investigate how the musealization of these sites can inform the Reclaiming Shingwauk Hall project, an effort to transform the former Shingwauk Indian Residential School in Sault Ste-Marie, Ontario, into a museal site. In studying the synergies between these projects, I seek to contribute to both bridging a gap in our understanding of the provenance of Indian residential schooling in Canada, and to the framing of a needed Canadian and transcultural and transnational reconciliatory museology.