Learning About Wrecksites: Difference between revisions

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Like the other figures in this Knowledge-Land-Scape, wrecksites are not merely a metaphorical figure.  
Like the other figures in this Knowledge-Land-Scape, wrecksites are not merely a metaphorical figure.  


In the case of Gjoa Haven, two shipwrecks, respectively the HMS Terror and HMS Erebus, exist in proximity to the community. These shipwrecks speak to longstanding (knowledge) encounters between Qablunaat (non-Inuit people) and Inuit across time and space. Whether such encounters materialize through site-specific instances, by for example the repurposing of wood from these shipwrecks to create traditional objects, or through more expansive relational structures like the Inuit Land Claim Agreements, the wrecksite refers, for me, to the materiality of larger agential apparatuses in encounter across time and space.  
In the case of Gjoa Haven, two shipwrecks, respectively the HMS Terror and HMS Erebus, exist in proximity to the community.  


Whether such encounters happen between the apparatuses of (inter)national science-based polar bear conservation, Inuit self-determination, or polar bear co-management and monitoring, the shipwreck is a figure that gestures towards the dynamic interplay of all such material agencies, within which the Bearwatch project, my Knowledge-Land-Scape and your decisions are entangled.
These shipwrecks speak to longstanding (knowledge) encounters between Qablunaat (non-Inuit people) and Inuit across time and space. Such encounters materialize through site-specific instances, like for example local trade <ref>Pearson, N. (2024). The multispecies shipwreck. International Journal of Heritage Studies, 30(6), 673-686.</ref>, but also through more expansive relational dynamics like Inuit Land Claim Agreements, (inter)national science-based polar bear conservation and polar bear co-management and monitoring.  
Here and there, the shipwrecks of such larger generative forces reveal themselves as materially constitutive agents in what can exist, and what can not exist as part of my research and this Knowledge-Land-Scape.  


<div class="next_choice"> You have now learnt about all the phenomena that you may encounter in this Knowledge-Land-Scape. Return to the instruction cut to end this tutorial.</div>
Here and there, the shipwrecks of such larger generative forces reveal themselves as materially constitutive agential cuts that determine what can, and what can not exist, at particular moments in time within my research, this Knowledge-Land-Scape, and your decisions as you thread your way through it.  


<span class="return to instructions link" data-page-title="Encounters Along the Way" data-section-id="1" data-encounter-type="return">[[Encounters Along the Way#Research Creation|Return to instructions]]</span>
<div class="next_choice"> You have now learnt about all the phenomena that you may encounter in this Knowledge-Land-Scape.
 
'''"Return"''' to the instruction cut to end this tutorial.</div>
 
 
 
 
<small><references /></small>
 
<span class="return to instructions link" data-page-title="Encounters Along the Way" data-section-id="1" data-encounter-type="return">[[Encounters Along the Way#Research Creation|Return: Return to instructions]]</span>

Latest revision as of 19:42, 16 May 2025

Like the other figures in this Knowledge-Land-Scape, wrecksites are not merely a metaphorical figure.

In the case of Gjoa Haven, two shipwrecks, respectively the HMS Terror and HMS Erebus, exist in proximity to the community.

These shipwrecks speak to longstanding (knowledge) encounters between Qablunaat (non-Inuit people) and Inuit across time and space. Such encounters materialize through site-specific instances, like for example local trade [1], but also through more expansive relational dynamics like Inuit Land Claim Agreements, (inter)national science-based polar bear conservation and polar bear co-management and monitoring.

Here and there, the shipwrecks of such larger generative forces reveal themselves as materially constitutive agential cuts that determine what can, and what can not exist, at particular moments in time within my research, this Knowledge-Land-Scape, and your decisions as you thread your way through it.

You have now learnt about all the phenomena that you may encounter in this Knowledge-Land-Scape. "Return" to the instruction cut to end this tutorial.



  1. Pearson, N. (2024). The multispecies shipwreck. International Journal of Heritage Studies, 30(6), 673-686.

Return: Return to instructions