From Dystopic to Decolonial
-
Published:2020-12-01
Issue:3
Volume:61
Page:317-336
-
ISSN:2047-7708
-
Container-title:Extrapolation: Volume 61, Issue 3
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Extrapolation
Abstract
This paper looks to Haisla-Heiltsuk writer Eden Robinson’s short story “Terminal Avenue” (2004) as a literary example of what Canada’s future might look like if the collectively felt anxiety that underpins settler society remains unchecked. I analyze “Terminal Avenue” as a work of speculative fiction that represents what I term the genre’s “ideology of indeterminacy” as a politically productive condition under which Indigenous/settler relations in contemporary Canada can be reassessed. My analysis builds on the work of settler scholars David M. Higgins and Conrad Scott published in Extrapolation, vol 57, nos. 1-2, 2016.
Publisher
Liverpool University Press
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Cultural Studies