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From Oceania to North America, indigenous peoples have created
storytelling traditions of incredible depth and diversity. The term
'indigenous storywork' has come to encompass the sheer breadth of
ways in which indigenous storytelling serves as a historical
record, as a form of teaching and learning, and as an expression of
indigenous culture and identity. But such traditions have too often
been relegated to the realm of myth and legend, recorded as
fragmented distortions, or erased altogether. Decolonizing Research
brings together indigenous researchers and activists from Canada,
Australia and New Zealand to assert the unique value of indigenous
storywork as a focus of research, and to develop methodologies that
rectify the colonial attitudes inherent in much past and current
scholarship. By bringing together their own indigenous
perspectives, and by treating indigenous storywork on its own
terms, the contributors illuminate valuable new avenues for
research, and show how such reworked scholarship can contribute to
the movement for indigenous rights and self-determination.
From Oceania to North America, indigenous peoples have created
storytelling traditions of incredible depth and diversity. The term
'indigenous storywork' has come to encompass the sheer breadth of
ways in which indigenous storytelling serves as a historical
record, as a form of teaching and learning, and as an expression of
indigenous culture and identity. But such traditions have too often
been relegated to the realm of myth and legend, recorded as
fragmented distortions, or erased altogether. Decolonizing Research
brings together indigenous researchers and activists from Canada,
Australia and New Zealand to assert the unique value of indigenous
storywork as a focus of research, and to develop methodologies that
rectify the colonial attitudes inherent in much past and current
scholarship. By bringing together their own indigenous
perspectives, and by treating indigenous storywork on its own
terms, the contributors illuminate valuable new avenues for
research, and show how such reworked scholarship can contribute to
the movement for indigenous rights and self-determination.
In 1884, the Canadian government enacted a ban on the potlatch, the
foundational ceremony of the Haida people. The tradition, which
determined social structure, transmitted cultural knowledge, and
redistributed wealth, was seen as a cultural impediment to the
government's aim of assimilation. The tradition did not die,
however; the knowledge of the ceremony was kept alive by the Elders
through other events until the ban was lifted. In 1969, a potlatch
was held. The occasion: the raising of a totem pole carved by
Robert Davidson, the first the community had seen in close to 80
years. From then on, the community publicly reclaimed, from the
Elders who remained to share it, the knowledge that has almost been
lost. Sara Florence Davidson, Robert's daughter, would become an
educator. Over the course of her own education, she came to see how
the traditions of the Haida practiced by her father--holistic,
built on relationships, practical, and continuous--could be
integrated into contemporary educational practices. From this
realization came the roots for this book.
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