Kind regards: Fire-making as ethical resistance and anticolonial praxis with River

Abstract

We are eight Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal scholars collaborating across Country who, in this paper, examine how relational, place-based storying functions as an ethical site of resistance and anti-colonial practice. Grounded in our relationships with three rivers, we demonstrate how being in relation with place and each other challenges colonial overwriting of history and enables the reimagining of anti-colonial futures. We introduce ‘fire-making’ as an ethical and anti-colonial methodology grounded in relationality. Like tending a fire, we collect material to enable ignition, feed and stoke the flames, and maintain burn through yarning, moving and storying together. This practice guides our engagement with uncomfortable truths about the ecological impacts of colonial behaviour. We examine how fences, signs and weeds materially mark ongoing colonial violence, while also exploring the ethical negotiations required to sustain respectful relationships with Country and one another. Our storying centres Aboriginal knowledges and memories. We position storytelling as a deliberate act of resistance, an intentional modelling of how Aboriginal peoples have always made futures. Through iterative cycles of sharing, responding, and re-telling, we show how collaborative, place-based storying can inform Indigenist futures and offer a cultural studies praxis grounded in ethical accountability to place.

Document Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

1-1-2025

Publication Title

Continuum

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

School

Kurongkurl Katitjin / Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA) / Centre for People, Place and Planet

RAS ID

88749

Funders

University of Canberra / Edith Cowan University / Australian Research Council

Grant Number

ARC Number : DE240100532

Comments

Somerville, W., Turner, B., Arnold, C., Isaacs-Guthridge, R., McKenzie, V., Van Den Heuvel, A., Godden, N. J., & Fuller, L. (2025). Kind regards: Fire-making as ethical resistance and anticolonial praxis with River. Continuum. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/10304312.2025.2595091

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Link to publisher version (DOI)

10.1080/10304312.2025.2595091