Indigenomicon: A Conversation


DATE
Wednesday January 28, 2026
TIME
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

The Institute for Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Social Justice Noted Scholars Series (co-sponsored by Green College, UBC Critical Play Lab, &
UBC Pop Culture Cluster) presents:

Indigenomicon: A Conversation”

 

Dr. Jodi A. Byrd


WHEN & WHERE

Wednesday January 28, 2026 

12-1pm

Buchanan Tower, Room 323

Please RSVP below in advance

A light lunch will be served at 1:00pm

 


Abstract:

Settler colonial studies and Indigenous studies are often assumed to be the same intellectual project. In Indigenomicon, Jodi A. Byrd examines the differences between the two fields by bringing video game studies and Indigenous studies into conversation with Black studies, queer studies, and Indigenous feminist critique. Byrd theorizes “the image of the law of the Indigenous” as structuring dispossession in games including Assassin’s Creed, Animal Crossing, BioShock Infinite, and Demon Souls. They demonstrate how games and play might reveal histories of slavery, genocide, and theft of Indigenous lands even as their structures obscure Indigenous spatial and embodied practices that prioritize relationships with land, water, plants, and spirits. With ground and relationality defined as key concepts, Byrd centers Indigenous visions of dystopias to reveal how game spaces encode settler structures of governance even as the design of games might yet provide vital modes of resistance to Indigenous erasure.

 

About Dr. Jodi A. Byrd 

Jodi A. Byrd is a citizen of the Chickasaw Nation and professor of Race, Diaspora, and Indigeneity at the University of Chicago. Their first book The Transit of Empire: Indigenous Critiques of Colonialism (University of Minnesota Press, 2011) won the 2013 Best First Book of the Year award from the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association, and the 2012 Wordcraft Circle Award for Academic Work of the Year. Byrd co-edited the collection Colonial Racial Capitalism with Susan Koshy, Lisa Marie Cacho, and Brian Jefferson published by Duke in 2022 and also co-edits the Northwestern University Press’ Critical Insurgencies series with Michelle Wright. Their book, Indigenomicon: American Indians, Video Games, and the Structures of Dispossession is forthcoming from Duke in early November. Prior to joining the University of Chicago, they were a professor in Literatures in English at Cornell University. They also helped build the American Indian Studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign from 2006–2015, and served as Acting Director of AIS during the 2013–2014 academic year. They have held an appointment in Indigenous Politics at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa and they received their PhD in English from the University of Iowa in 2002.