Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/26018
Title: Indigenous research methodology : Gluskabe's encounters with epistemicide
Authors: Sockbeson, Rebecca
Keywords: Indigenous peoples -- Research -- Methodology
Knowledge, Theory of
Ethnology -- Methodology -- Education
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: University of Malta. Faculty of Education
Citation: Sockbeson, R. (2017). Indigenous research methodology : Gluskabe's encounters with epistemicide. Postcolonial Directions in Education, 6(1), 1-27.
Abstract: Indigenous Research Methodology (IRM) and its embedded engagement with Indigenous Epistemology rises above and lives beyond the reach of the subjugating colonial project of epistemicide, the colonial intention to eradicate Indigenous ways of knowing and being, or epistemologies and ontologies. This paper offers a lens through which I make visible where, when and how particularly situated Indigenous epistemologies continue to thrive. I have selected two documents to provide critical context for the colonial and genocidal intentions of epistemicide, and to purposefully demonstrate the endurance of Waponahki epistemology, and through such evidence of presence, deliberately point out its critical relevance in contemporary schooling. Waponahki refers to the Penobscot, Passamaquoddy, Maliseet, Mi’kmaq and Abenaki peoples who live in Maine and the Maritime Provinces of Canada and have formed a post-contact political alliance, the Wabanaki Confederacy. In this work I discuss the concept of epistemicide from a lived understanding of Indigenous research as a way of life; a way of knowing derived from many years of accumulated experiential knowledge. In an embodied and material way, I am a part of that thread of intergenerational knowledge and both benefit from and contribute to that knowledge and empirical process. My poetic renditions appear in the paper and attempt to provide further insight into the discussion. Given the Waponahki people’s continued engagement with the living Gluskabe, a spirit being and teacher in Penobscot culture, epistemicide remains an incomplete colonial project. Gluskabe’s encounters with epistemicide are those very places wherein I identify or bring to light the ongoing vitality of Indigenous epistemology, which I identify as Red Hope.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/26018
Appears in Collections:PDE, Volume 6, No. 1
PDE, Volume 6, No. 1

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