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Spring 2020
Indigenous futurisms, a term coined by Grace Dillon in 2003, and indebted to Afrofuturism, seeks to describe a movement of art, literature, games, and other forms of media that express Indigenous perspectives on the future, present, and past. This research outlines the scope of Métis futurisms as...
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2020-12-01
Navras Kamal, Rafaella Grana, Jordon Ogonoski, Cody Balderston, Joel Goodson, Johnas Wong
Stranded on a strange island frozen in time, a fisherman tries to return home. Guided by another castaway, fight through monsters and avoid traps to reach the guardians that seal the curse. Freeze to read your enemies' intentions and plan your next move, but don't lose track of time!
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2019-04-01
Ian Wark, Alexander Ozero, Emily Casavant, Hope Docking, Alexis Graham, Bella Fuccaro
Where The Flame Took You is a narrative stealth horror game about exploring memories and confronting trauma. As the player character Jamie, you enter a surreal dreamlike forest where objects of Jamie’s childhood home are scattered around. As you explore the space, some objects trigger flashbacks....
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Fall 2011
First and foremost, this work offers a critical review of recent influential environmental theorists’ efforts to construct and defend normatively significant accounts of wilderness. As such, this work focuses on the definitions provided by environmental philosophers Eric Katz, Holmes Rolston...
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Where Water Hits Home: Colonial Technologies of Violence on IBPOC Peoples and Nonhuman Nature in Canada
DownloadFall 2021
This research-creation questions and resists colonial technologies such as industrialization and urbanization that exploit environments and IBPOC peoples–Indigenous, Black, and People of Colour–as resources for colonial "progress." The research examines how nature and human relations intersect...
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