Abstract

Our ancestors are master story tellers. They interweave our past, present and future for us. They deliver our genealogy, connecting people and their environment, conveying identity and obligation. Can you hear their voices in the city as you move along its waterways and paths and through its structures? In recent decades there has been a resurgence in the use of Indigenous languages, knowledges, culture and stories in urban areas. For some of us, there is a sense of optimism that comes from the success of initiatives that reassert the potency and integrity of Indigenous worldviews in the urban setting. Initiatives that contribute and re-remember a richer story. In this paper, I explore how Indigenous-led urban strategies in central Ōtautahi|Christchurch are serving to prize open a space for Indigenous stories in the settler-colonial city and thereby support Indigenous peoples to be and see themselves through the resulting reconnection to place, culture, history and kin.

Full Text
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