Podcast, Urban Issues, Community, Social Justice
Episode 20: Politicizing the urban park — with Selena Couture & Matt Hern
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What does it mean to use and enjoy a city park on unceded Indigenous land? Am Johal interviews co-authors of (Fernwood Publishing 2019), Matt Hern and Selena Couture, who wrote the book with two of their daughters, Sadie Couture and Daisy Couture. As a white settler family, they have lived near and around East Vancouver’s Victoria Park (AKA Bocce Ball Park) for years. Interrogating the concept of urban parks as colonial constructs, they investigate the land politics of this small green space with such a multiplicity of overlapping users and sovereignties.
About Our Guests
Selena Couture
Selena Couture is an Assistant Professor of Drama at the University of Alberta. Her research and work examines intersections of performance and Indigeneity, particularly regarding uses of Indigenous perforamnces as a way to tell Indigenous histories eroded by colonialism with a parallel inquiry into colonial performance and the construction of whiteness. Her research has been published in Theatre Journal, Performance Research, Canadian Theatre Review, alt.theatre as well as a chapter in Recasting Commodity and Spectacle in the Indigenous Americas.
Matt Hern
Matt Hern is a community-based activist and organizer who teaches urban studies at AV, Cape Breton University, and UBC. He is the co-founder and co-director of Solid State Industries and has written books including What a City is For: Remaking Politics of Displacement (MIT Press, 2016), Global Warming and the Sweetness of Life (MIT, 2018 with Am Johal and Joe Sacco).
CITE THIS EPISODE
CHICAGO STYLE
Johal, Am. “Politicizing the urban park — with Selena Couture & Matt Hern.” Below the Radar, AV’s Vancity Office of Community Engagement. Podcast audio, July 8, 2019. /vancity-office-community-engagement/below-the-radar-podcast/episodes/20-matt-hern-selena-couture.html.
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