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parsed(2018-09-07) - pubdate: 09/18
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pub date: 1536296400
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Structures of Indifference

An Indigenous Life and Death in a Canadian City

September 7, 2018 | Trade paperback
ISBN: 9780887558351
$17.95
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Description

Structures of Indifference examines an Indigenous life and death in a Canadian city and what it reveals about the ongoing history of colonialism. In September 2008, Brian Sinclair, a middle-aged, non-Status Anishinaabe resident of Winnipeg, arrived in the emergency room of a major downtown hospital. Over a thirty-four- hour period, he was left untreated and unattended to, and ultimately died from an easily treatable infection.

McCallum and Perry present the ways in which Sinclair, once erased and ignored, came to represent diffuse, yet singular and largely dehumanized ideas about Indigenous people, modernity, and decline in cities. This story tells us about ordinary indigeneity in the city of Winnipeg through Sinclair's experience and restores the complex humanity denied him in his interactions with Canadian health and legal systems, both before and after his death.

About this Author

MARY JANE LOGAN MCCALLUM is a Professor of History at the University of Winnipeg.
ADELE PERRY is a Professor is a Professor of History at the University of Manitoba.
 

ISBN: 9780887558351
Format: Trade paperback
Pages: 144
Publisher: University of Manitoba Press
Published: 2018-09-07

Reviews

"Situates a global and pervasive history of dispossession and marginalization within a local and specific story of one Indigenous life."

"One is to hope that this book is another nail in the coffin of colonialism's impact on Indigenous people in Canada."

"An accessible resource, providing undergraduate and graduate students, researchers, historians, and members of the general public a deep and careful study of what the life and death of one man can tell us about the deadly legacy and troubling contemporary prevalence of racism in the Canadian healthcare system."

"In a Canadian hospital in 2008, an Indigenous man was left untreated and unattended for 34 hours and died of an easily treatable infection. A subsequent inquest wrestled with whether to examine systemic racism against Indigenous peoples as a contributing factor in Brian Sinclair's death, or to focus solely on operational or procedural failures. The historian-authors use inquest documents as their primary archive to analyze how legal processes narrowly define and interpret events to effectively obscure the violence of contemporary settler colonialism. The book situates a global and pervasive history of dispossession and marginalization within a local and specific story of one Indigenous life. [...] A key success is that the authors never lose sight of Sinclair's complex humanity as a man and family member, and as an urban Indigenous community member within an institution, city, province, and country that too often dehumanizes and ignores Indigenous peoples."

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