丁香园AV

Madeline Knickerbocker

PhD Candidate

Master of Museum Studies, University of Toronto, 2010
BA, History and French, 丁香园AV, 2008

Supervisor: Mary-Ellen Kelm
Personal Website: 

Research Description

My research explores the connections between cultural curation and political activism in St贸:l艒 communities. Spanning the twentieth century, this work addresses key moments in the history of encounters between St贸:l艒 and anthropologists, colonial agents, and other newcomers who sought to control, reshape, or alter St贸:l艒 cultural heritage practices and protocols. Despite these attempts, St贸:l艒 retained significant forms of power over their cultural heritage, negotiating their relationships with museums and colonial institutions in surprising and productive ways.

Adopting an ethnohistorical methodology informed by new scholarship on feminist anticolonial praxis, this research relies on oral history interviews and archival evidence collected over the course of a number of years living in St贸:lo虅 territory (BC鈥檚 Fraser Valley). This approach contributes back to the field by allowing for discussion of the politics and pragmatics of conducting community-based research, and engaging deeply with questions of the compatibility of oral testimony and archival evidence.

The dissertation is framed by the sustained discussion of one object: a shovel-nosed canoe carved by Chief William Sepass in 1915. Discussion of the ways St贸:lo虅 and settlers treat the canoe at given moments in its history serve as successive introductory vignettes, foregrounding ideas germane to each chapter, and simultaneously anchoring the reader鈥檚 experience with a concrete demonstration how the curation of St贸:lo虅 heritage has changed over time. Chapters themselves explore numerous themes: how relationships between missionaries and St贸:lo虅 chiefs and elders in the early decades of the twentieth century complicated St贸:lo虅 political organization; the sometimes fraught, sometimes productive interactions between St贸:lo虅 communities and anthropologists such as Diamond Jenness, Casey Wells, Wilson Duff, Marian Smith, and Wayne Suttles from the 鈥30s to the 鈥60s; the collaborative work of Chilliwack Museum staff and St贸:lo虅 people in the 1960s, highlighting Chief Richard Malloway鈥檚 contributions to the museum board, and Amy Cooper and Oliver Wells鈥 work to create the Salish Weavers鈥 Guild; St贸:lo虅 efforts in the 1970s to take back the contested Coqualeetza site from the Armed Forces, and to establish it as a cultural heritage site in the 1980s; and a campaign by St贸:lo虅 and non-Indigenous activists to save an archaeological and spiritual site, at the same time as St贸:lo虅 tribal governance was going through major transformation. The narrative concludes by assessing the Sepass family鈥檚 2011 request to 鈥渂ring home鈥 their ancestor鈥檚 canoe from the Chilliwack Museum to the St贸:lo虅 Research and Resource Management Center, the most recent example in this history of St贸:lo虅 affirmations of the sovereignty of their cultural curation.

While the examination of the long history of St贸:lo虅 cultural curation not only complicates prevailing assumptions in museum studies and public history that Indigenous/non-Indigenous heritage collaborations are a product of the 1990s, analysis of these cross-cultural projects also reveals the complexities of allyship between Indigenous peoples and settlers. In these ways, and by arguing for broadened understandings of both 鈥渃ulture鈥 and 鈥減olitics,鈥 this work also furthers the fields of Native-newcomer and twentieth century British Columbian histories.  

Working Dissertation Title

A Sovereign Culture: The Politics of St贸:l艒 Heritage in the Twentieth Century

Publications

Peer-Reviewed Publications

鈥淲hat We鈥檝e Said Can be Proven in the Ground鈥: St贸:lo虅 Sovereignty and Historical Narratives at X谩:ytem, 1990-2006,鈥 Journal of the Canadian Historical Association (forthcoming in volume 25, issue 1).

鈥淐edar, Seagrass and Soapstone: Redefining the Teacup in Colonial Canada,鈥 in Paul Basu, ed., The Inbetweenness of Things (edited volume resulting from The Inbetweenness of Things symposium, The British Museum, 22-23 March 2013; publisher tbc). Co-authored with Lisa Truong.

Book Reviews

Review of Honne, The Spirit of the Chehalis: The Indian Interpretation of the Origin of the People and Animals. Narrated by George Sanders, collected and arranged by Katherine Van Winkle Palmer, introduced by Jay Miller (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2012). Pacific Northwest Quarterly, forthcoming.

Review of Myth and Memory: Stories of Indigenous-European Contact, John Lutz, ed (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2007). Native Studies Review, forthcoming.

Review of Museum Pieces: Toward the Indigenization of Canadian Museums, by Ruth B. Phillips (Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen鈥檚 University Press, 2011). Muse, Winter 2013: 51.

Review of These Mysterious People: Shaping History and Archaeology in a Northwest Coast Community, by Susan Roy (Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen鈥檚 University Press, 2010). BC Studies, 174 (Summer 2012): 125-127.

Review of The Power of Place, the Problem of Time: Aboriginal Identity and Historical Consciousness in the Cauldron of Capitalism, by Keith Thor Carlson (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2010). BC Studies 172 (Winter 2011/12): 128-129.

鈥淔lorence Vale, 鈥楶regnant Bird.鈥欌 The University College Collection: Great Art for a Great University. Matthew Brower and Naimh O鈥橪aoghaire, eds. Toronto: University of Toronto Art Center, 2010. 72.

Conference Papers

鈥淣avigating Histories in S鈥檕lh T茅m茅xw: Sto:lo Canoes as Relational Mnemonics.鈥 American Society for Ethnohistory Annual Meeting, New Orleans, Louisiana. September 11-14, 2013.

鈥淲hy Didn鈥檛 You Say it Was This Rock?: X谩:ytem, Historical Consciousness, and St贸:lo虅 Sovereignty.鈥 Canadian Historical Association Annual Meeting, Victoria BC. June 3-5, 2013.

鈥溾楤ring Home the Canoe鈥: Travelling Through St贸:lo虅 History with Chief William Sepass鈥 Shovel-Nosed Canoe.鈥 People of the River Conference, organized by the St贸:lo虅 Research and Resource Management Center, Sardis, BC. Written and presented with Bill Sepass. May 31-June 2, 2013.

鈥溾楾he Modern Museum that we wish to establish鈥: St贸:lo虅 Cultural Curation and Political Activism in the 1970s.鈥 BC Studies Conference, Douglas College, New Westminster BC. May 2-4, 2013.

鈥淐edar, Seagrass, and Soapstone: Redefining the Teacup in Colonial Canada.鈥 The Inbetweenness of Things: Materializing Mediation and Movement Between Worlds. Symposium co-hosted by the British Museum and University College London. Written and presented with Lisa Truong. March 22-23, 2013.

鈥溾業t Will be Pleasure and also Education to Them鈥: Mary Lipsett, Civic-Mindedness, and Cross-Cultural Exhibitions in Vancouver.鈥 International Council of Museums 鈥 Collections and Activities of Museums of Cities conference, Museum of Vancouver. October 24-27, 2012.

鈥淪udden Transformation: Aboriginally-Centered Archaeological Interpretation at X谩:ytem Longhouse.鈥 Indigenous People and Museums: Unraveling the Tensions, Inter-Congress of the World Archaeological Congress, Indianapolis, Indiana. June 22-25, 2011.

鈥淣arratives of Place at X谩:ytem and St贸:l玫 Community Building.鈥 Indigenous Studies Graduate Students Conference, University of British Columbia. March 12-13, 2011.

鈥淛unk or Treasure? Gender and Authenticity in Mary Lipsett鈥檚 鈥業ndian Museum鈥.鈥 Qualicum Graduate History Conference, Parskville, BC. January 28-30, 2011.

鈥淴谩:ytem / Sudden Transformation: St贸:l艒 Place-Making and Community Building.鈥 Alberta Museums Association Conference, Edmonton. September 23-35, 2010. Written with the collaboration of Terry Horne, Alanna Jurgens and Justine Raymond.

鈥淐reating Partnerships: An Inquiry into the 1992 Task Force on Museums and First Peoples.鈥 Taking Stock: Museum Studies and Museum Practices in Canada, University of Toronto. April 22-24, 2010. Written and presented with Hannah Turner.

鈥淭he History of the 鈥業ndian Exhibit鈥: Aboriginal Artifacts in the Lipsett Collection.鈥 Carleton Underhill Graduate Student Colloquium. March 5-6, 2010.

鈥淔rom Controversy to Collaboration: The Spirit Sings and the Task Force Report.鈥 University of Toronto Annual Graduate History Symposium. February 4-5, 2010.

Awards

SSHRC Joseph-Armand Bombardier CGS Doctoral Scholarship, 2011-2014
Travel and Minor Research Award, 2013
Dr. J. V. Christensen Graduate Scholarship, 2012
Dr. J. V. Christensen Graduate Scholarship, 2011
丁香园AV Graduate Fellowship, 2010
Pacific Century Graduate Scholarship, 2010
Douglas Cole Memorial Scholarship, 2010
Canadian Museums Association Award, 2010
Gordon Cressy Student Leadership Award, 2010
A.Y. Elizabeth McCullough Scholarship, 2010
Florence Partridge Scholarship, 2009
Museum Studies Entrance Fellowship, 2008

Teaching Assistantships

History 102W: Canada since Confederation (Spring 2014)

History 115: History of (Western) Sexuality (Fall 2012)

History 101: Canada to Confederation (Fall 2010)

Research Assistantships

Research Assistant for Dr. Elise Chenier, Department of History, 丁香园AV, 2012-2013

Research Assistant for Dr. Mary-Ellen Kelm, Department of History, 丁香园AV, 2011-2012

Research Assistant for Dr. Lynne Teather, Museum Studies, University of Toronto, 2009-2010

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