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Biology’s Andrea Reid at CUAG: Afternoon Intersections: Who are the Knowledge Keepers and Producers?

Monday, March 18, 2019 from 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm

Afternoon Intersections: Who are the Knowledge Keepers and Producers?

Monday, 18 March 2019, 3:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.

What can occur when two scholars explore unexpected intersections between their fields of research? Join us to find out! Carleton University academics Julie Garlen and Andrea Reid will be speaking about their current research in relation to two exhibitions at CUAG. Hear their separate talks and then join the discussion to bring out convergences across new and exciting research in order create conversations between the exhibitions.

Admission is free, everyone is welcome, and coffee and tea will be provided.

In UPRISING: THE POWER OF MOTHER EARTH — Christi Belcourt — A Retrospective with Isaac Murdoch, several of Belcourt’s paintings are filled with fish of the Great Lakes, and “Water is Life” is a repeated call to action. Andrea Reid will reflect on Christi Belcourt’s work as a water protector, and how the water-fish-people nexus is at the heart of both of their pursuits. She will explore the role that Indigenous Knowledge must have in fisheries conservation – in securing a future for the water, fish, and all that they sustain.

Re: Working Together / Re : Travailler ensemble includes two videos made by artists who work collaboratively with children: Hannah Jickling and Helen Reed’s SOUR VS. SOUR and Mikhail Karikis’ Children of Unquiet. Focusing on these works, Julie Garlen will discuss the relationship between social constructions of childhood (particularly childhood innocence) and participation, including children as artistic and cultural producers.

Andrea Reid is a fisheries scientist and conservation biologist. She combines ecological and social science methodologies, adopting an integrative approach to complex fisheries questions. She belongs to the Nisga’a Nation on British Columbia’s North Coast and has significant experience with Indigenous fisheries communities, practices, perspectives and issues in British Columbia as well as around the world (East Africa, Oceania and Southeast Asia). Andrea holds a B.Sc. in Environment and a M.Sc. in Biology from McGill University. She is co-supervised between Carleton University and the University of British Columbia for her Ph.D. in Biology, centered on Pacific salmon fisheries and conservation. Her research and outreach are supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Royal Canadian Geographical Society and the National Geographic Society.

Julie C. Garlen is an Associate Professor of Child Studies and the Co-Director of the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies at Carleton. Previously, she worked in early childhood teacher education in the U.S. South for 11 years. Her research explores how culture functions symbolically, institutionally, and pedagogically in the lives of children and youth. She is currently working to understand how the myth of childhood innocence has informed work with children within the context of the United States and Canada.