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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10791/470

Title: WHEN MYTH OVERSHADOWS HISTORICAL ARTEFACTS: A SOCIAL SEMIOTIC ANALYSIS USING CROWN PHOTOGRAPHY
Authors: Shawl-Song, Ivy Katherine
Supervisor(s): Dr. Cynthia Blodgett-Griffin (Athabasca University) Dr. Pamela Walsh (Athabasca University)
Examining Committee: Dr. Susan Bainbridge (Athabasca University)
Dr. Emily Doyle (Athabasca University)
Degree: M.Ed.(DE)
Department: Centre for Distance Education
Keywords: Social Semiotics
Crown Photography
Child Advocacy
Difficult History
Digital Images
Values and Ethics
Archival Practices
Residential Schools
Distance Education
Issue Date: 2-Dec-2024
Abstract: The go-to images representing the history of Canada’s Indian Residential Schools (IRS) are of identifiable Indigenous children—often digitized Crown photography now used to teach difficult history. The choice of digital image in online education may perpetuate the exploitation of children and distract from historical context that facilitates critical inquiry among learners. This social semiotic research analyzed a Crown photograph for paradigmatic relationships with similar themed images to answer the question of missing context and its effect on truth value around a society’s ideologies. Second order semiotics informed by Barthes’ Signification process ending in myth reveals false beliefs associated with images of children and the IRS: enforced institutionalization, child advocacy, presentation of a comprehensive history, and cultural genocide. Notably, image presentation is habitually contrary to social norms related to the protection of children. Further research into ethical reflexivity of digital image choice in education is warranted.
Graduation Date: Jun-2025
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10791/470
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