An unsettling history: Book co-edited by U of T prof explores oppressive, violent Black experiences in Canada
The 含羞草传媒鈥檚 Funk茅 Aladejebi hopes readers find to be just as the title promises: unsettling.
The book, released this month, consists of 21 essays from a variety of scholars who explore the diverse, oppressive and often violent experiences of persons of African descent across Canada鈥檚 history.
鈥淚t's meant to push boundaries, or at least force us to think about those boundaries 鈥 it鈥檚 by no means a polite representation of Canadian history,鈥 says Aladejebi, the book鈥檚 co-editor an assistant professor in the Faculty of Arts & Science鈥檚 department of history.
Historical essays include 鈥淧lanting Slavery in Nova Scotia鈥檚 Promised Land, 1759鈥1775鈥 by historian and professor Karolyn Smardz Frost, and 鈥淎 Forgotten Generation: African Canadian History between Fugitive Slaves and World War I鈥 by Adam Arenson, a professor of history and director of the urban studies program at Manhattan College.
More contemporary works include: 鈥淭he part of you that鈥檚 Rwanda: Creating a Rwandan Diaspora Community in the Greater Toronto Area in the Early Twenty-First Century鈥 by York University graduate student, Anna Ainsworth; and 鈥淲restling with Multicultural Snake Oil: A Newcomer鈥檚 Introduction to Black Canada鈥 by Daniel McNeil, a professor and Queen's National Scholar Chair in Black Studies at Queen's University.
鈥淭he book really does live up to its name,鈥 says Aladejebi. 鈥淚t desires to unsettle the way we think about Canada as a white space both figuratively and metaphorically. It seeks to unsettle our understandings of Canadian history and Black Canadian studies.鈥
Including essays that extend from the historical to the contemporary was done deliberately to show how the history connects to 鈥 and influences 鈥 current patterns of Black settlement and belonging in Canada.
鈥淏lack Canadian history is not something that happened in the past 鈥 it's constantly changing and evolving,鈥 says Aladejebi, noting that greater knowledge of historical foundations leads to a better understanding of today鈥檚 environments.
鈥淗ow is it that in the summer of 2020 we've had this racial reckoning?鈥 she asks. 鈥淲here did that come from in the Canadian context? There's a history, but that history fundamentally affects how we see communities today.鈥
Designed for students, post-secondary professors looking for content, community leaders and the general public, the book鈥檚 contributors span several disciplines 鈥 history, geography, sociology, gender studies, cultural studies and law 鈥 many of whom cross over disciplines in their teaching and research.
鈥淚n a lot of ways, scholars have had to be interdisciplinary because most of our disciplines do not do enough to tell the complex story of Blackness,鈥 says Aladejebi.
Four years in the making, the book was born out of frustration for Aladejebi and co-editor Michele Johnson, a professor in the department of history at York University.
鈥淲e created the volume as a response to inquiries from students who wanted to get a sense of the national breadth of Black Canadian history and Black Canadian studies,鈥 says Aladejebi. 鈥淏ut there simply wasn鈥檛 a great deal of organized material to work from, so materials for Black studies courses were often piecemeal.鈥
What few resources were available were often outdated.
鈥淭he most quintessential book that we have is The Blacks in Canada by Robin Winks that was published in 1971,鈥 says Aladejebi. 鈥淗e's an American historian and he didn't think about Blackness in the way we talk about Blackness now. And so we thought, 鈥榃hy don't we create a more comprehensive review of Black Canadian history across chronology and geography to tell a more national story of Blackness in Canada?鈥
In addition to being co-editor, Aladejebi also contributes an essay, 鈥淚 Don鈥檛 Know if I Should Say This: Black Women, Oral History, and Contesting the Great White North.鈥
鈥淢y chapter is about how we conduct oral histories on living communities鈥 says Aladejebi. 鈥淗ow can we use oral history as a way to understand Black Canadian populations and to speak to the absences in the archives around Black women's experiences more specifically?鈥
Complementing this focus on the importance of oral histories, Aladejebi has been active with lively events that have bolstered discussions about Black Canadian history.
The first was a roundtable discussion on Feb. 28 about Aladejebi鈥檚 previous book, Schooling the System: A History of Black Women Teachers. Aladejebi and panelists highlighted the role Black educators have played and continue to play in institutional and pedagogical change at all levels of learning, including at universities.
The second event was an online book launch event on March 11 for Unsettling the Great White North with four of the book鈥檚 contributors discussing their work. The event attracted more than 200 participants across North America.
The book, the active events and discussions demonstrate that 鈥渢he field of Black Canadian studies is incredibly rich and diverse, and it's time to push this field even further,鈥 says Aladejebi.
鈥淚t's worthy of critical inquiry, critical study and examination. In this volume, there鈥檚 lots you can use to begin your own work on Black Canadian studies and history. And there's lots you can take from this to teach others.
鈥淭his volume will help the general public and educators be able to say, 鈥業 have a sense of what enslavement looked like in early Canada, I have a sense of early migratory patterns in Canada, I have a sense of what Black communities were looking like in Vancouver, and what it was looking like in Nova Scotia,鈥欌 she says.
鈥淭ake it, use it, have more unsettling conversations and keep it going. That's the goal, to keep the field growing and evolving.鈥