• About
    • Info & Team
    • Support
    • Storefront
  • Work
    • Undergraduate Work
    • Graduate Work
    • Alumni Work
    • Faculty Work
    • Co-op
  • Community
    • Exhibition
    • Event
    • Initiatives
  • Articles
bridge@waterlooarchitecture.com
BridgeBridge
  • About
    • Info & Team
    • Support
    • Storefront
  • Work
    • Undergraduate Work
    • Graduate Work
    • Alumni Work
    • Faculty Work
    • Co-op
  • Community
    • Exhibition
    • Event
    • Initiatives
  • Articles

THESIS: Bush Garden

October 11, 2014 Posted by Magdalena Miłosz Event, Graduate Work, Work

Bush Garden

Abstract by Danielle Gignac

To garden is to draw with the land.

This tending is the primary act of culture: to perpetuate a people by negotiating with a place. Gardening impresses hope upon the land, measuring the bounds of sustenance.

A boundary is a necessary condition for a garden. I argue in this thesis that the boundaries of the garden are not always tangible. Indeed, in the case of the James Bay Cree, physical enclosures traditionally held little purpose in their way of life. Through gardening in numerous contexts, I have experienced land not as a commodity, but as a place to cultivate complex relationships. From this understanding, supported by literature and time spent with a First Nations community, I have come to approach “the bush” of the Cree as a garden in the fullest sense.

In this thesis, I first describe a number of externally imposed boundaries that have contributed to the present conditions in remote northern communities. I then position the landscape of the Omushkego Cree of the James Bay Lowlands within negotiable moral boundaries, founded upon reciprocal relationships between a people and a land. These relationships are manifest in the words and markings that trace indigenous movement over the land, which centre around the harvest of food. Through narrative, this text unfolds the map of tradition in which food is a gift from the land, from mythical beginnings to current concerns, taking the practice of gardening as a measure of the Omushkego Cree’s relationship to their land.
 
Supervisor:

Dr. Anne Bordeleau, University of Waterloo

Committee Members:

Donald McKay, University of Waterloo

Val Rynnimeri, University of Waterloo

External Reader:

Jane Holland, Government of Ontario – Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport

The defence examination will take place Thursday, October 16, 2014 at 2:00pm in the Architecture Community Garden (see below for map).

A copy of the thesis is available for perusal in ARC 2106A.

Magdalena Miłosz
+ postsBio

I am a graduate student at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture, currently completing my MArch thesis on the design and collective memory of Indian residential schools in Canada.

  • Magdalena Miłosz
    https://waterlooarchitecture.com/bridge/blog/author/mmilosz/
    THESIS: A House of No Importance
  • Magdalena Miłosz
    https://waterlooarchitecture.com/bridge/blog/author/mmilosz/
    THESIS: “Don’t Let Fear Take Over”: The Space and Memory of Indian Residential Schools
  • Magdalena Miłosz
    https://waterlooarchitecture.com/bridge/blog/author/mmilosz/
    THESIS: MAKING THE CITY – A Document on Tactical Urbanism
  • Magdalena Miłosz
    https://waterlooarchitecture.com/bridge/blog/author/mmilosz/
    THESIS: Tales of a Flood
Tags: bushCreeDanielle Gignacgardenthesis

About Magdalena Miłosz

I am a graduate student at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture, currently completing my MArch thesis on the design and collective memory of Indian residential schools in Canada.

You also might be interested in

M1 Open Studio Night

M1 Open Studio Night

Jan 17, 2014

For nearly thirty incoming graduate students, the fall term meant[...]

THESIS: Healing through Architecture

THESIS: Healing through Architecture

Jul 30, 2015

Jennifer Beggs’s thesis entitled "Healing through Architecture," explores the relationship between environments and the chemical reactions in the body that enable healing. She focused specifically on how architecture can have a positive impact on patients receiving chemotherapy. Jennifer will defend her these on Tuesday August 4, 2015 at 4:30 PM in ARC 1001.

THESIS: Tales of a Flood

THESIS: Tales of a Flood

Dec 2, 2014

Alireza Takook will defend his thesis, the narrative of a destructive natural phenomenon depicting an architect's evolving understanding of the natural world, on December 10 at 10 am in the Architecture Loft.

Leave a Reply Cancel Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Search

BRIDGE

Center for Architecture + Design

7 Melville St. S, Cambridge, ON

  • bridge@waterlooarchitecture.com

© 2025 — BRIDGE.