Colonization Through Design explores the extent to which housing, and ideas of home and domesticity, were fundamental to the colonization of Indigenous people in Canada, tracing the historic conflict between agricultural Christian society and Indigenous ways of knowing, and the ongoing assimilative practices of the contemporary settler state. Renwick assesses the use of geometry and planning to create a cartesian and commodified landscape upon which Indigenous peoples were corralled and controlled, and the purposeful imposition of an explicit idea of home. Further, he looks at the generic western European model of Canadian northern housing, with its division between domestic and work environments, as a failure for Indigenous occupants. The design profiles within the book explore a new design plurality that links innovative technical solutions with Indigenous knowledge; it assesses various design solutions that generate cultural continuity and environmental sustainability. This volume precedes a design competition for the adaptation and repurposing of existing Indigenous housing stock, inviting collaborations between communities and makers, manufacturers, designers, and students, and an exhibition that will share these ideas throughout Canada and New Zealand.
Colonization Through Design