By tmnationtalk on April 18, 2025
By tmnationtalk on April 18, 2025
By tmnationtalk on April 18, 2025
By tmnationtalk on April 18, 2025
By ahnationtalk on April 17, 2025
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by ahnationtalk on April 15, 202548 Views
April 14, 2025
How do you humanize an Internet meme? Niitsitapi (Blackfoot) filmmaker Damien Eagle Bear set out to do this in his Telus originals documentary #skoden, which will have its premiere at the DOXA Documentary Film Festival.
As many rez kids will tell you, Skoden is a popular slang term in Indigenous communities, meaning “let’s go then”—i.e., it’s time to take action or engage in battle. Some interpret it as a message of resistance. This probably explains why “Skoden” showed up as graffiti on a Sudbury water tower in 2018. There’s even an annual Skoden Indigenous Film Festival at Simon Fraser University.
“Skoden” took on new life in the mid-2010s. This came after an older, poverty-stricken, and disheveled Indigenous man was photographed with his fists raised, ready to defend himself. The image went viral on social media, prompting Indigenous people to apply the hashtag #skoden as a term of endearment.
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This article comes from NationTalk:
https://nationtalk.ca
The permalink for this story is:
https://nationtalk.ca/story/doxa-festival-skoden-is-more-than-a-meme-its-a-film-that-speaks-volumes-about-indigenous-settler-relations-in-canada-pancouver
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