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Lane 220: Arts-Based Epistemology & Cinema-AI Bridge

IAIP Research
outreach--n-renaud-concordia

Lane 220: Arts-Based Epistemology & Cinema-AI Bridge

Parent Issue: miadisabelle/Etuaptmumk-RSM#216
Child Issue: miadisabelle/Etuaptmumk-RSM#220
Date: 2026-06-01

Research Focus

Indigenous cinema as relational knowledge practice; Fourth Cinema; visual sovereignty; intellectual bridges between cinema and generative AI systems.

Key Findings

1. Fourth Cinema & Visual Sovereignty

Fourth Cinema (Barry Barclay framework): Moves beyond representation about Indigenous peoples to self-representation that destabilizes dominant narratives.

Visual Sovereignty: Acts of self-determination in knowledge-making. Indigenous filmmakers chart culturally specific ethical protocols for knowledge production—this is epistemological authority, not just content diversity.

Key Insight: Cinema is not a representational tool; it's a relational and epistemological practice.

2. Indigenous Media Sovereignty

Core Principles:

  • Remediation of archives with Indigenous language/epistemology creates knowledge accountability
  • Collaborative filmmaking as "power-sharing" and "anti-oppressive research"
  • Place-based visual storytelling embeds relational protocols between land, story, and cultural knowledge
  • Filming is place-making: not extraction but regeneration of reciprocal relations

Caution: Many "Indigenization" efforts remain cosmetic (inclusion model). Substantive practice requires institutional power redistribution and relational accountability.

3. Relational AI as Epistemological Practice

Both Indigenous cinema and relational AI share a fundamental reframing:

  • Away from: Extraction (camera as extractive tool; AI as knowledge extractor)
  • Toward: Relationality (camera as witness in ceremony; AI as relational participant in knowledge-making)

4. Cinema ↔ AI Intellectual Bridge

ConceptIndigenous CinemaRelational AIThe Bridge
EpistemologyAffective, embodied knowingNarrative as co-constituted knowledgeBoth reject extraction; embrace emergence
AuthorityVisual sovereignty (who speaks)Relational alignment (with whom)Protocol-driven, not algorithm-driven
KnowledgeEmbedded in place, protocol, relationSituated in context, reciprocityBoth require accountability to community
TemporalityNon-linear, cyclical narrative structureGenerative narrative that regenerates understandingBoth honor emergence over efficiency
Technology RoleCamera as witness, not extractorAI as relational participant, not oracleBoth are participatory, not extractive

5. Key Cautions for Generative Systems

  1. Extraction Risk: Generative systems can replicate colonial epistemology if framed as "extracting narratives" from data
  2. Sovereignty vs. Automation: Indigenous cinema's sovereignty principle contradicts frictionless automation—protocols create friction intentionally
  3. Absence as Knowledge: Indigenous epistemology honors what is not said/shown; generative systems trend toward maximum content generation
  4. Generative Hermeneutical Ignorance: Generative systems can erase marginalized knowledge without cultural grounding—the inverse of Indigenous cinema's sovereignty

Sources