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Spectral geographies: haunting and everyday state practices in colonial and present-day Alaska
Authors:Kate Shipley Coddington
Institution:1. Department of Geography , Syracuse University , 144 Eggers Hall, Syracuse, NY, 13244, USA kssenner@syr.edu
Abstract:Haunting is an analytic that foregrounds connections between the past and the present day. I employ haunting to analyze everyday practices of the colonial state in Alaska, thereby reinforcing the material connections between everyday activities and narratives and the imaginaries they create, questioning the timeless character of many studies of everyday geographies, and demanding attention to justice. A case study from Alaska involving federal non-recognition of the Qutekcak tribe demonstrates connections between colonial histories and present-day practices of the state, connections that take shape as a ‘spectral geography.’
Keywords:haunting  everyday state practices  spectral geographies  colonialism  Alaska
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