Gesturing Indigenous Futurities Through the Remix by Karyn Recollet is a paper analyzing the YouTube video Ay I Oh Stomp by Skookum Sound System. In her paper, Recollet suggests that Ay I Oh Stomp uses remixing to bring Indigenous peoples out of the past and into the future, through the use of colours, overlaying one video over another, and mirroring the image. Recollet argues that “the layering of moving bodies is an instance wherein relatives are repatriated back to this time/ space continuum” (99). Ay I Oh Stomp layers a clip of a Kwakwaka’wakw Thunderbird dancer from the 1914 film In the land of the headhunters, onto footage of popper Julious iGlide Chisolm, dancing. This effect compares the traditional Thunderbird dancing to the modern style of popping. iGlide represents Indigenous Peoples in the future while the Kwakwaka’wakw Thunderbird dancer breaks into the frame, representing that Indigenous Peoples are not only a people of the past.
Here is the citation for this article and below is also the link to the Ay I Oh Stomp video. I would advise you to watch it, as it will make the paper more interesting.
Recollet, Karyn “Gesturing Indigenous Futurities Through the Remix.” Dance Research Journal, vol. 48 no. 1, 2016, pp. 91-105. Project MUSE, muse.jhu.edu/article/617353.
Ay I Oh Stomp by Skookum Sound System