Striving for a common language: A white feminist parallel to Indigenous ways of knowing and researching
Data(s) |
01/01/2005
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Resumo |
In Striving Towards a Common Language I outline an innovative methodology which consists of three strands encompassing an Indigenous-centred approach based on Indigenous Self-determination (participatory action research), relationship as central to socio-cultural dynamics, and feminist phenomenology. This methodology - which I call Living On the Ground was created in direct concert with 13 Indigenous women elders who were my hosts, teachers and walytja (family) as we worked together to create a dynamic cultural revitalisation project for their community, one of Australia's most remote Aboriginal settlements. I explain the processes I went through as a White Irish-Australian woman living with the women elders and their 11 dogs in a one room tin shed for two years, and tell of how the nexus of land, Ancestors, and the Tjukurrpa (Dreaming) combined with White cultural practices came to inspire a methodology which took the best from Indigenous and (White) feminist ways of knowing and of being. (c) 2005 Z. de Ishtar. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd |
Palavras-Chave | #Women's Studies #C1 #370106 Sociological Methodology and Research Methods #749999 Education and training not elsewhere classified |
Tipo |
Journal Article |