This paper reveals the journey of two settler-researcher-educators supporting learning in preparation for Carey Newman’s Witness Blanket Art Exhibit. Invited to create curriculum for students and educators of K-12 who would visit the exhibit, the authors describe co-curricular making as a living, re-generative, re-cursive experience. The learning alongside diverse perspectives of educators and community partners in circle—including Syilx Okanagan, School District, Art Gallery, Museum, and University—led to reconsidered understandings of co-curricular making. Relational commitments that invite co-curricular engagement with the Witness Blanket foreground Syilx Knowledge toward resisting colonial ways, and supporting tmixw, the life forces of Syilx Okanagan Territory.
CITATION STYLE
Dlouhy-Nelson, J., & Hanson, K. (2023). Finding Our Co-: Witness Blanket as Co-curricular Making for Local Indigenous and Settler Relations. LEARNing Landscapes, 16(1), 131–144. https://doi.org/10.36510/LEARNLAND.V16I1.1101
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