The Wreck-site

From Knowledge-land-scape
Revision as of 11:21, 4 March 2025 by 77.174.243.90 (talk)

The Wrecksite as a figuration to think with emerges from the existing wrecks of HMS Terror and Erebus, in the vicinity of Gjoa Haven: material traces of long-standing Inuit-Qablunaat (non-Inuit) encounters.

These sites are not static ruins but shifting spaces where history, knowledge, and materiality intertwine.

Research as a wreck-site is not just about what is uncovered, but how research itself becomes a contested space, claimed, studied, and sometimes fought over. Shaped by seasonal forces as shifting ice and weather limit access, altering what can be seen, gathered, or known, it also becomes a foundations for new growth.

My research is both a site of "becoming reef," opening new relational possibilities, as it is part of becoming research "heritage"- shaped by layered histories and ongoing transformation.

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Return to: "Another Point of Beginning"