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Indigenous decolonization

Indigenous decolonization describes ongoing theoretical and political processes whose goal is to contest and reframe narratives about indigenous community histories and the effects of colonial expansion, cultural assimilation, exploitative Western research, and often though not inherent, genocide.[1] Indigenous people engaged in decolonization work adopt a critical stance towards western-centric research practices and discourse and seek to reposition knowledge within Indigenous cultural practices.[1]

The decolonial work that relies on structures of western political thought has been characterized as paradoxically furthering cultural dispossession. In this context, there has been a call for the use of independent intellectual, spiritual, social, and physical reclamation and rejuvenation even if these practices do not translate readily into political recognition.[2] Scholars may also characterize indigenous decolonization as an intersectional struggle that "cannot liberate all people without first addressing racism and sexism."[1]

Beyond the theoretical dimensions of indigenous-decolonization work, direct action campaigns, healing journeys, and embodied social struggles for decolonization are frequently associated with ongoing native resistance struggles and disputes over land rights, ecological extraction, political marginalization, and sovereignty. While native resistance struggles have gone on for centuries, an upsurge of indigenous activism took place in the 1960s - coinciding with national liberation movements in Africa, Asia, and the Americas.[3]

Methods edit

Indigenous Postcolonial Theory edit

Coined by Anna Lees, the methodology of "Indigenous Postcolonial Theory" builds upon and draws clear distinctions from other schools of postcolonial or decolonial thought.[4] First, the prefix post– doesn’t refer to a period of time, but rather a perpetual ambition of eradicating the political and social power imbalances and effects of colonization that manifest in efforts to culturally assimilate and stereotype Native Americans.[5] Secondly, Indigenous Postcolonial Theory was developed as an alternative method to exercising a broad, blanket critical theory to particularly center indigenous knowledge and values rather than applying a wholesale form of decolonization to Indigenous-specific trauma, strive, love, and joy.[4] Similarly, Marie Battiste posits that Indigenous Postcolonial Theory offers a method of deconstructing the layers and intricacies of colonization, its effect, and its underlying assumptions, in a way that Eurocentric theory is unable to do. She says, "[IPT] is based on our pain and our experiences, and it refuses to allow others to appropriate this pain and these experiences."[5]

Survivance, sovereignty, and rhetorical sovereignty edit

Gerald Vizenor coined the term survivance to characterize the struggle of colonized indigenous communities.[6] Combining the words "survival" and "resistance", he evokes "the duality of how Native Americans have survived brutal genocides and continue to resist white supremacist laws and culture that are designed to disenfranchise and assimilate". According to Vizenor, "Survivance is an active sense of presence, the continuance of native stories, not a mere reaction, or survivable name. Native survivance stories are renunciation of dominance, tragedy, and victimry." Thus, survivance is defined as "the resistance (of) colonial tendencies to resign indigeneity to the past by characterizing an ongoing state of being in response to colonizing efforts."

According to King, Gubele, and Anderson, the study and "decolonization" of Native American Indigeneity "requires an understanding of the importance of sovereignty to American Indian nations…"[7] In this context, he defines sovereignty as including the localized self-determination of a people, as well as the political authority of nationhood and the recognition of equal-status with similarly sovereign international peers. King, Gubele, and Anderson believe that not only is this crucial for political purposes, but it's crucial for cultural and religious purposes, as well: "For Native nations, this kind of a nation is defined by a peoplehood, a concept that has its roots in the preservation and prospering of the community and binds its members together in cultural and often religious terms."[7]

Citing the history of changes in US legislative terminology that sequentially redefined indigenous "nations" to "tribes" and "treaties" to "agreements", Stephen R. Lyons sought to generate a standard of "rhetorical sovereignty". Lyons looks at what he identifies as being "the communicative practices of the colonizer", and how consequently, indigenous representations and freedoms are constrained, as a result. He says, "Rhetorical sovereignty is the inherent right of peoples to determine their own communicative needs and desires in this pursuit, to decide for themselves the goals, modes, styles, and languages of public discourse."[8] In essence, the ambition of Indigenous rhetorical sovereignty is the desire to give rhetorical control, and thus representational control, to Indigenous ethnic groups.

Narrative, counter-storytelling, and testimonies edit

Thomas King states in his book The Truth about Stories: A Native Narrative that stories have a substantial impact on the human condition and humans’ constructed reality as a whole. They frame human relationships, perspectives, and moral codes.[9] As King, Gubele, and Anderson put it, "The stories we tell each other tell us who we are, locate us in time and space and history and land, and suggest who gets to speak and how."[7] Similarly, the stories that are widely disseminated or suppressed indicate similar societal expectations and limitations. Norman Denzin, Yvonna Lincoln, and Linda Smith, in their book titled "Handbook of Critical and Indigenous Methodologies", assert that "The Euro-American canon and its continuance of Greco-Roman traditions has deliberately marginalized indigenous stories that manifest in practices of theorizing, speaking, writing, and making", and that the telling of such stories would provide "alternatives to and challenge dominant narratives", thus becoming counter-narratives to them.[10]

Linda Tuhiwai Smith writes that storytelling is a means of connecting past generations to the future ones and the land to the community by "passing down the beliefs and values of a culture in the hope that the new generations will treasure them and pass the story down further."[11] The themes and motifs of these stories pass down shared histories, knowledge, and cultural identity that can range from "humour and gossip and creativity… [to] love, sexual encounters, … [and] war and revenge."[12]

Indigenous testimonies are a means and practice of pushing back against oppression and suppression by providing oral evidence about a painful experience or series of experiences. Linda Tuhiwai Smith writes that testimonies are contingent on a formal structure, a supportive atmosphere and audience, and upholding "a notion that truth is being revealed ‘under oath.’"[12]

Food sovereignty edit

It has been speculated that food sovereignty is a means of providing a path towards decolonization. Its definition, in recent years, has been noted to be highly modifiable due to its dependency on the context of the circumstances to which it is applied.[13][14] In indigenous context, where sovereignty does not serve the right meaning and political intent,[13][15] the concept of food sovereignty sometimes does not follow the traditional meanings of each individual word.[13][15]

It has been discussed and theorized in the indigenous context of the concept that food sovereignty is also an effort of reclaiming culture and former relationship to land;[13][15][14] it has also been noted that, as a situational concept, food sovereignty in the traditional sense may have underlying traces of capitalist or colonialist interests.[14] Food sovereignty's adaptable definition in the context of indigenous decolonization, in relation to the reclamation of culture, is then highly hypothesized to be a strong route towards decolonization.[13][14]

Challenges and initiatives edit

Reclaiming indigenous knowledge and practices edit

Indigenous knowledge and practices are deeply embedded in Indigenous cultures and encompass a wide array of systems, including traditional ecological knowledge, spiritual beliefs, healing practices, storytelling, and artistic expressions. However, the historical colonization of Indigenous communities has systematically devalued and suppressed these knowledge systems.[16] Colonial powers have imposed Western worldviews and systems on indigenous communities suppressing their cultures, languages, and spiritual beliefs. To address this, scholars like Winona LaDuke advocate for the reclamation and revitalization of Indigenous knowledge as an integral part of the decolonization process.[17]

Organizations such as the First Peoples' Cultural Council in Canada and the Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival in the United States actively work to revitalize Indigenous languages and support language revitalization initiatives.[18][19] The First Peoples' Cultural Council, in particular, prioritizes cultural revitalization and youth engagement within Canada. They offer funding, training, and resources for language programs, traditional arts, and cultural preservation projects and utilize digital platforms to make cultural knowledge accessible while respecting Indigenous protocols.[18]

Overcoming symbolic and superficial decolonization edit

Despite the abundance of decolonization efforts, many of them are symbolic and superficial and fail to address the underlying structures of power and inequality.[20] These approaches often create an illusion of progress without effectively addressing the systemic injustices faced by Indigenous communities. One such gesture is the renaming of a school after an Indigenous leader.[21] This tokenistic gesture is done in place of incorporating Indigenous knowledge systems into their curricula or providing substantial support to Indigenous students and communities. In response, scholars like Tuck and Yang criticize these gestures and emphasize the importance of challenging systems of colonization through the acknowledgment of Indigenous rights through substantive actions like land repatriation.[22]

More recent efforts[when?] towards land repatriation come from The Indigenous Land Stewardship - an initiative led by Indigenous communities and organizations such as the Native Land Conservancy and the Cultural Conservancy. They prioritize land repatriation, ecological restoration, and the revitalization of traditional land management practices, ensuring that Indigenous peoples have control and decision-making power over their ancestral territories.[23]

Sovereignty and borders edit

Sovereignty and borders is also a contested issue in the decolonization process, particularly within the context of settler colonialism.[24] Reclaiming Indigenous lands and asserting political autonomy are key components of challenging the structures of settler governance. Sovereignty allows Indigenous peoples to govern themselves according to their own laws, traditions, and values, reinforcing their cultural identity and promoting the revitalization of Indigenous knowledge and practices. Recognizing the artificial nature of borders is crucial, as they often hinder Indigenous self-determination and governance.[25] A notable example comes from the lack of acknowledgment of the Mohawk people's sovereign right to cross the US-Canada border that predates Canada and the U.S.[24]

Efforts led by organizations like the Native American Rights Fund (NARF) aim to defend tribal sovereignty, protect treaty rights, support land and resource reclamation, and address border-related issues impacting Indigenous communities. Through legal representation and advocacy, NARF defends tribal sovereignty, protects treaty rights, and supports efforts to reclaim ancestral lands and resources. They also address border-related issues impacting Indigenous communities and work towards the recognition of traditional border-crossing rights.[26]

Decolonizing education edit

Decolonizing education aims to challenge and transform existing educational systems that have historically perpetuated colonization and marginalized Indigenous knowledge and ways of knowing. In particular, it aims to center Indigenous knowledge systems, languages, and cultural perspectives within educational institutions.[27] Battiste in particular emphasizes the importance of revitalizing Indigenous languages and traditions, promoting Indigenous ways of knowing.[28] She promotes Indigenous ways of knowing in education and fostering cultural pride and identity among Indigenous students.

Organizations like the National Association for Indigenous Studies (NAISA) also advocate for decolonizing education through transforming curricula, promoting Indigenous methodologies, revitalizing languages and cultures, and supporting Indigenous teacher education. Their work aims to challenge colonial legacies and create culturally responsive and inclusive educational environments.[29]

Indigenous research methods edit

Prioritizing Indigenous research methodologies is also essential in decolonizing research practices and generating knowledge that serves Indigenous communities. Shawn Wilson's book "Research is Ceremony: Indigenous Research Methods" promotes the use of Indigenous research approaches rooted in Indigenous protocols, ethics, and knowledge systems.[30] It emphasizes community engagement, reciprocity, and the affirmation of Indigenous perspectives and voices. Similarly, Linda Tuhiwai Smith highlights the importance of centering Indigenous worldviews and methodologies while respecting cultural protocols, including obtaining free, prior, and informed consent.[31]

NAISA also promotes Indigenous research methods through various initiatives including organizing research methodology workshops, developing Indigenous research ethics guidelines, and providing platforms for sharing Indigenous knowledge and research findings. They also support Indigenous researchers through mentorship programs, networking opportunities, and research funding emphasizing collaboration with Indigenous communities. They also encourage community-driven research that respects cultural protocols and community ownership.[29]

Implications of Western knowledge production and epistemologies edit

As Western scientists and academics have and continue to take advantage of knowledge from and about Indigenous communities (whether in publications[32][33] or through new pharmaceuticals[34][35]), those Indigenous communities are excluded from control over the nature and usage of the newly created knowledge. Thus, Indigenous communities are spoken for and become the indigenous "other" as those institutional systems and structures reproduce a knowledge that "becomes a commodity of colonial exploitation".[36] This continues to reinforce the privileging of Western knowledge and epistemologies over non-Western or Indigenous funds of knowledge (or traditional knowledge) in Western academia. This privilege manifests itself when, according to Norman K. Denzin and Yvonna S. Lincoln, "Indigenous knowledge systems are too frequently made into objects of study, treated as if they were instances of quaint folk theory held by the members of a primitive culture."[10] Indigenous decolonization seeks a dramatic shift in the subject of academic inquiry. Rather than comparing Indigenous knowledge systems in comparison to empirical Western values, Indigenous decolonization aims to reverse this perspective so that Western funds of knowledge are subjected to due examination and study en route to restoring Indigenous knowledge, traditions, and culture.[10]

There are specific advantages to applying Indigenous decolonization to practices and situations involving Indigenous peoples over alternative critical lenses such as critical theory, or more specifically critical race theory. According to Denzin and Lincoln, critical theory’s broad tenets of liberation and sovereignty are far too generalized for this application: "Critical theory must be localized, grounded in the specific meanings, traditions, customs, and community relations that operate in each Indigenous setting."[10] Otherwise, a critical theory that disregards context and embraces ubiquitous characteristics of social movements cannot guide meaningful change when applied to a specific Indigenous context.

In art edit

 
An example of a piece within the new Indigenous and Canadian Gallery at the National Art Gallery of Canada

Indigenous artists have been using art as a form of activism for many years. Jarrett Martineau and Eric Ritskes say that art forms are never separate from our political forms and "Indigenous art thus occupies a unique space within settler colonialism: both as a site for articulating Indigenous resistance and resurgence, and also as a creative praxis that often reinscribes indigeneity within aesthetic and commodity forms that circulate in the capitalist art market".[37] Art can be used in political struggle to bring attention to important issues and to better convey the experiences of Indigenous peoples. Indigenous artists attempt to work outside of the binary of colonialism in their art. Martineau and Ritskes describe Indigenous art as "the generative expression of creativity, not the violence of colonial domination, and it is in Indigenous art's resistant motion to disavow the repetition of such violence that it recuperates the spirit of ancestral memory and place, and forges new pathways of re-emergence and return".[37]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Smith, L. T. (1999). Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples. Zed Books.
  2. ^ Elliott, Michael. "Participatory parity and indigenous decolonization struggles." Constellations (2016): 1-12.
  3. ^ Hill, Gord. 500 years of Indigenous resistance. PM Press, 2010.
  4. ^ a b Lees, Anna (2016-09-27). "Roles of Urban Indigenous Community Members in Collaborative Field-Based Teacher Preparation". Journal of Teacher Education. 67 (5): 363–378. doi:10.1177/0022487116668018. ISSN 0022-4871. S2CID 152113071.
  5. ^ a b Battiste, Marie (2013-10-24). "Indigenous knowledge and indigenous peoples' education". doi:10.18356/aa0ced95-en. Retrieved 2021-03-09. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ LaGrand, James B.; Vizenor, Gerald (1996). "Manifest Manners: Postindian Warriors of Survivance". The Western Historical Quarterly. 27 (1): 87. doi:10.2307/969936. ISSN 0043-3810. JSTOR 969936.
  7. ^ a b c King, Lisa; Gubele, Rose; Anderson, Joyce Rain, eds. (2015). Survivance, Sovereignty, and Story: Teaching American Indian Rhetorics. doi:10.7330/9780874219968. ISBN 9780874219968.
  8. ^ Lyons, Scott Richard (February 2000). "Rhetorical Sovereignty: What Do American Indians Want from Writing?". College Composition and Communication. 51 (3): 447–468. doi:10.2307/358744. ISSN 0010-096X. JSTOR 358744.
  9. ^ King, Thomas (2011). The Truth About Stories: a Native Narrative. House of Anansi Press. ISBN 978-0-88784-895-7. OCLC 746746794.
  10. ^ a b c d Denzin, Norman; Lincoln, Yvonna; Smith, Linda (2008). Handbook of Critical and Indigenous Methodologies. Thousand Oaks, California: Sage Publications. doi:10.4135/9781483385686. ISBN 978-1-4129-1803-9.
  11. ^ Cain, Tiffany (2013-11-25). "Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples, 2nd Edition by Linda Tuhiwai Smith. London and New York: Zed Books, 2012. 240 pp". Anthropology & Education Quarterly. 44 (4): 443–445. doi:10.1111/aeq.12032. ISSN 0161-7761.
  12. ^ a b McDonough, Sara (2013). "Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples by Linda Tuhiwai Smith". Collaborative Anthropologies. 6 (1): 458–464. doi:10.1353/cla.2013.0001. ISSN 2152-4009. S2CID 144079116.
  13. ^ a b c d e Grey, Sam, Patel, Raj (2015). "Food sovereignty as decolonization: some contributions from indigenous movements to food system and development politics". Agriculture and Human Values. 32 (3): 431–444. doi:10.1007/s10460-014-9548-9. S2CID 55545504.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ a b c d Figueroa-Helland, Leonardo; Thomas, Cassidy; Aguilera, Abigail (2018). "Decolonizing Food Systems: Food Sovereignty, Indigenous Revitalization, and Agroecology as Counter-Hegemonic Movements". Perspectives on Global Development and Technology. 17 (1–2): 173–201. doi:10.1163/15691497-12341473 – via Brill.
  15. ^ a b c Asfia Gulrukh, Kamal; Dipple, Joseph; Linklater, Rene; Thompson, Shirley (2015). "Recipe for Change: Reclamation of Indigenous Food Sovereignty in O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation". Decolonization, Resource Sharing, and Cultural Restoration, Globalizations. 12: 559–575 – via Scholar's Portal.
  16. ^ Smith, Linda Tuhiwai, "Decolonizing knowledge", Research Justice, Bristol University Press, pp. 205–210, doi:10.2307/j.ctt1t89jrt.25, retrieved 2023-06-13
  17. ^ Grimshaw, Mike (2008-08-21). "Recovering the Sacred: The Power of Naming and Claiming by Winona LaDuke.Cambridge, MA: South End Press, 2005. ISBN-13:978-0-89608-712-5. 294 pp". Implicit Religion. 10 (3): 322–324. doi:10.1558/imre2007.v10i3.322. ISSN 1743-1697.
  18. ^ a b "Indigenous Languages Arts Cultures BC | First Peoples' Cultural Council". First Peoples Cultural Council. 2023-06-14. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  19. ^ "Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival – Helping Native communities create new speakers". Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  20. ^ Styres, Sandra (2018-06-14), "Literacies of Land", Indigenous and Decolonizing Studies in Education, Routledge, pp. 24–37, doi:10.4324/9780429505010-2, ISBN 978-0-429-50501-0, S2CID 197711037, retrieved 2023-06-14
  21. ^ Poitras Pratt, Yvonne; Louie, Dustin W.; Hanson, Aubrey Jean; Ottmann, Jacqueline (2018-01-24), "Indigenous Education and Decolonization", Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Education, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190264093.013.240, ISBN 978-0-19-026409-3, retrieved 2023-06-13
  22. ^ Tuck, Eve; Yang, K. Wayne (2012-09-08). "Decolonization is not a metaphor". Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society. 1 (1). ISSN 1929-8692.
  23. ^ "The Cultural Conservancy". The Cultural Conservancy. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  24. ^ a b "Conclusion Interruptus", Mohawk Interruptus, Duke University Press, pp. 177–194, 2020-12-31, doi:10.1515/9780822376781-008, ISBN 9780822376781, S2CID 241753567, retrieved 2023-06-14
  25. ^ Ashley, Jeffrey S. (2014-02-15). "The Rights of Indians and Tribes by Stephen L. Pevar". Human Rights Review. 15 (1): 103–104. doi:10.1007/s12142-014-0314-6. ISSN 1524-8879. S2CID 255518490.
  26. ^ "About Us". Native American Rights Fund. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  27. ^ Brant, Jennifer (2014-10-09). "Decolonizing Education: Nourishing the Learning Spirit". Brock Education Journal. 23 (2). doi:10.26522/brocked.v23i2.398. ISSN 2371-7750.
  28. ^ Brant, Jennifer (2014). "Decolonizing Education: Nourishing the Learning Spirit". Brock Education Journal. 23 (2). doi:10.26522/brocked.v23i2.398. ISSN 2371-7750.
  29. ^ a b "About NAISA · Native American and Indigenous Studies Association". Native American and Indigenous Studies Association. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  30. ^ Watson, Robert (2012-05-30). "Research is ceremony: Indigenous research methods by Shawn Wilson". The Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe canadien. 56 (2): 294–295. Bibcode:2012CGeog..56..294W. doi:10.1111/j.1541-0064.2012.00419.x. ISSN 0008-3658.
  31. ^ Tuhiwai Smith, Linda (2021). Decolonizing Methodologies. Zed Books. doi:10.5040/9781350225282. ISBN 978-1-78699-813-2. S2CID 241981019.
  32. ^ Barsh, Russel Lawrence (2001). "Who Steals Indigenous Knowledge?". Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting. 95: 153–161. doi:10.1017/s0272503700056834. ISSN 0272-5037. S2CID 150738799.
  33. ^ Bhukta, Anindya (2020-06-18). Legal Protection for Knowledge. doi:10.1108/9781800430631. ISBN 978-1-80043-066-2. S2CID 219905931.
  34. ^ Pennacchio, Marcello; Ghisalberti, Emilio L (January 2000). "Indigenous knowledge and pharmaceuticals". Journal of Australian Studies. 24 (64): 173–175. doi:10.1080/14443050009387569. ISSN 1444-3058. S2CID 54745135.
  35. ^ Norchi, Charles H. (2001), Montgomery, John D.; Inkeles, Alex (eds.), "Indigenous knowledge as intellectual property", Social Capital as a Policy Resource, Boston, MA: Springer US, pp. 161–172, doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-6531-1_10, ISBN 978-1-4419-4871-7, S2CID 153825999, retrieved 2021-03-11
  36. ^ Akena, Francis Adyanga (September 2012). "Critical Analysis of the Production of Western Knowledge and Its Implications for Indigenous Knowledge and Decolonization". Journal of Black Studies. 43 (6): 599–619. doi:10.1177/0021934712440448. ISSN 0021-9347. S2CID 143709815.
  37. ^ a b Martineau, Jarrett; Ritskes, Eric (2014-05-20). "Fugitive indigeneity: Reclaiming the terrain of decolonial struggle through Indigenous art". Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society. 3 (1). ISSN 1929-8692.

indigenous, decolonization, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, message, until, conditions, july, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, describes, ongoing, theoretical, political, pr. The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Indigenous decolonization describes ongoing theoretical and political processes whose goal is to contest and reframe narratives about indigenous community histories and the effects of colonial expansion cultural assimilation exploitative Western research and often though not inherent genocide 1 Indigenous people engaged in decolonization work adopt a critical stance towards western centric research practices and discourse and seek to reposition knowledge within Indigenous cultural practices 1 The decolonial work that relies on structures of western political thought has been characterized as paradoxically furthering cultural dispossession In this context there has been a call for the use of independent intellectual spiritual social and physical reclamation and rejuvenation even if these practices do not translate readily into political recognition 2 Scholars may also characterize indigenous decolonization as an intersectional struggle that cannot liberate all people without first addressing racism and sexism 1 Beyond the theoretical dimensions of indigenous decolonization work direct action campaigns healing journeys and embodied social struggles for decolonization are frequently associated with ongoing native resistance struggles and disputes over land rights ecological extraction political marginalization and sovereignty While native resistance struggles have gone on for centuries an upsurge of indigenous activism took place in the 1960s coinciding with national liberation movements in Africa Asia and the Americas 3 Contents 1 Methods 1 1 Indigenous Postcolonial Theory 1 2 Survivance sovereignty and rhetorical sovereignty 1 3 Narrative counter storytelling and testimonies 1 4 Food sovereignty 2 Challenges and initiatives 2 1 Reclaiming indigenous knowledge and practices 2 2 Overcoming symbolic and superficial decolonization 2 3 Sovereignty and borders 2 4 Decolonizing education 2 5 Indigenous research methods 3 Implications of Western knowledge production and epistemologies 4 In art 5 See also 6 ReferencesMethods editIndigenous Postcolonial Theory edit Coined by Anna Lees the methodology of Indigenous Postcolonial Theory builds upon and draws clear distinctions from other schools of postcolonial or decolonial thought 4 First the prefix post doesn t refer to a period of time but rather a perpetual ambition of eradicating the political and social power imbalances and effects of colonization that manifest in efforts to culturally assimilate and stereotype Native Americans 5 Secondly Indigenous Postcolonial Theory was developed as an alternative method to exercising a broad blanket critical theory to particularly center indigenous knowledge and values rather than applying a wholesale form of decolonization to Indigenous specific trauma strive love and joy 4 Similarly Marie Battiste posits that Indigenous Postcolonial Theory offers a method of deconstructing the layers and intricacies of colonization its effect and its underlying assumptions in a way that Eurocentric theory is unable to do She says IPT is based on our pain and our experiences and it refuses to allow others to appropriate this pain and these experiences 5 Survivance sovereignty and rhetorical sovereignty edit Gerald Vizenor coined the term survivance to characterize the struggle of colonized indigenous communities 6 Combining the words survival and resistance he evokes the duality of how Native Americans have survived brutal genocides and continue to resist white supremacist laws and culture that are designed to disenfranchise and assimilate According to Vizenor Survivance is an active sense of presence the continuance of native stories not a mere reaction or survivable name Native survivance stories are renunciation of dominance tragedy and victimry Thus survivance is defined as the resistance of colonial tendencies to resign indigeneity to the past by characterizing an ongoing state of being in response to colonizing efforts According to King Gubele and Anderson the study and decolonization of Native American Indigeneity requires an understanding of the importance of sovereignty to American Indian nations 7 In this context he defines sovereignty as including the localized self determination of a people as well as the political authority of nationhood and the recognition of equal status with similarly sovereign international peers King Gubele and Anderson believe that not only is this crucial for political purposes but it s crucial for cultural and religious purposes as well For Native nations this kind of a nation is defined by a peoplehood a concept that has its roots in the preservation and prospering of the community and binds its members together in cultural and often religious terms 7 Citing the history of changes in US legislative terminology that sequentially redefined indigenous nations to tribes and treaties to agreements Stephen R Lyons sought to generate a standard of rhetorical sovereignty Lyons looks at what he identifies as being the communicative practices of the colonizer and how consequently indigenous representations and freedoms are constrained as a result He says Rhetorical sovereignty is the inherent right of peoples to determine their own communicative needs and desires in this pursuit to decide for themselves the goals modes styles and languages of public discourse 8 In essence the ambition of Indigenous rhetorical sovereignty is the desire to give rhetorical control and thus representational control to Indigenous ethnic groups Narrative counter storytelling and testimonies edit Thomas King states in his book The Truth about Stories A Native Narrative that stories have a substantial impact on the human condition and humans constructed reality as a whole They frame human relationships perspectives and moral codes 9 As King Gubele and Anderson put it The stories we tell each other tell us who we are locate us in time and space and history and land and suggest who gets to speak and how 7 Similarly the stories that are widely disseminated or suppressed indicate similar societal expectations and limitations Norman Denzin Yvonna Lincoln and Linda Smith in their book titled Handbook of Critical and Indigenous Methodologies assert that The Euro American canon and its continuance of Greco Roman traditions has deliberately marginalized indigenous stories that manifest in practices of theorizing speaking writing and making and that the telling of such stories would provide alternatives to and challenge dominant narratives thus becoming counter narratives to them 10 Linda Tuhiwai Smith writes that storytelling is a means of connecting past generations to the future ones and the land to the community by passing down the beliefs and values of a culture in the hope that the new generations will treasure them and pass the story down further 11 The themes and motifs of these stories pass down shared histories knowledge and cultural identity that can range from humour and gossip and creativity to love sexual encounters and war and revenge 12 Indigenous testimonies are a means and practice of pushing back against oppression and suppression by providing oral evidence about a painful experience or series of experiences Linda Tuhiwai Smith writes that testimonies are contingent on a formal structure a supportive atmosphere and audience and upholding a notion that truth is being revealed under oath 12 Food sovereignty edit It has been speculated that food sovereignty is a means of providing a path towards decolonization Its definition in recent years has been noted to be highly modifiable due to its dependency on the context of the circumstances to which it is applied 13 14 In indigenous context where sovereignty does not serve the right meaning and political intent 13 15 the concept of food sovereignty sometimes does not follow the traditional meanings of each individual word 13 15 It has been discussed and theorized in the indigenous context of the concept that food sovereignty is also an effort of reclaiming culture and former relationship to land 13 15 14 it has also been noted that as a situational concept food sovereignty in the traditional sense may have underlying traces of capitalist or colonialist interests 14 Food sovereignty s adaptable definition in the context of indigenous decolonization in relation to the reclamation of culture is then highly hypothesized to be a strong route towards decolonization 13 14 Challenges and initiatives editThis section is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Reclaiming indigenous knowledge and practices edit Indigenous knowledge and practices are deeply embedded in Indigenous cultures and encompass a wide array of systems including traditional ecological knowledge spiritual beliefs healing practices storytelling and artistic expressions However the historical colonization of Indigenous communities has systematically devalued and suppressed these knowledge systems 16 Colonial powers have imposed Western worldviews and systems on indigenous communities suppressing their cultures languages and spiritual beliefs To address this scholars like Winona LaDuke advocate for the reclamation and revitalization of Indigenous knowledge as an integral part of the decolonization process 17 Organizations such as the First Peoples Cultural Council in Canada and the Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival in the United States actively work to revitalize Indigenous languages and support language revitalization initiatives 18 19 The First Peoples Cultural Council in particular prioritizes cultural revitalization and youth engagement within Canada They offer funding training and resources for language programs traditional arts and cultural preservation projects and utilize digital platforms to make cultural knowledge accessible while respecting Indigenous protocols 18 Overcoming symbolic and superficial decolonization edit Despite the abundance of decolonization efforts many of them are symbolic and superficial and fail to address the underlying structures of power and inequality 20 These approaches often create an illusion of progress without effectively addressing the systemic injustices faced by Indigenous communities One such gesture is the renaming of a school after an Indigenous leader 21 This tokenistic gesture is done in place of incorporating Indigenous knowledge systems into their curricula or providing substantial support to Indigenous students and communities In response scholars like Tuck and Yang criticize these gestures and emphasize the importance of challenging systems of colonization through the acknowledgment of Indigenous rights through substantive actions like land repatriation 22 More recent efforts when towards land repatriation come from The Indigenous Land Stewardship an initiative led by Indigenous communities and organizations such as the Native Land Conservancy and the Cultural Conservancy They prioritize land repatriation ecological restoration and the revitalization of traditional land management practices ensuring that Indigenous peoples have control and decision making power over their ancestral territories 23 Sovereignty and borders edit Sovereignty and borders is also a contested issue in the decolonization process particularly within the context of settler colonialism 24 Reclaiming Indigenous lands and asserting political autonomy are key components of challenging the structures of settler governance Sovereignty allows Indigenous peoples to govern themselves according to their own laws traditions and values reinforcing their cultural identity and promoting the revitalization of Indigenous knowledge and practices Recognizing the artificial nature of borders is crucial as they often hinder Indigenous self determination and governance 25 A notable example comes from the lack of acknowledgment of the Mohawk people s sovereign right to cross the US Canada border that predates Canada and the U S 24 Efforts led by organizations like the Native American Rights Fund NARF aim to defend tribal sovereignty protect treaty rights support land and resource reclamation and address border related issues impacting Indigenous communities Through legal representation and advocacy NARF defends tribal sovereignty protects treaty rights and supports efforts to reclaim ancestral lands and resources They also address border related issues impacting Indigenous communities and work towards the recognition of traditional border crossing rights 26 Decolonizing education edit Decolonizing education aims to challenge and transform existing educational systems that have historically perpetuated colonization and marginalized Indigenous knowledge and ways of knowing In particular it aims to center Indigenous knowledge systems languages and cultural perspectives within educational institutions 27 Battiste in particular emphasizes the importance of revitalizing Indigenous languages and traditions promoting Indigenous ways of knowing 28 She promotes Indigenous ways of knowing in education and fostering cultural pride and identity among Indigenous students Organizations like the National Association for Indigenous Studies NAISA also advocate for decolonizing education through transforming curricula promoting Indigenous methodologies revitalizing languages and cultures and supporting Indigenous teacher education Their work aims to challenge colonial legacies and create culturally responsive and inclusive educational environments 29 Indigenous research methods edit Prioritizing Indigenous research methodologies is also essential in decolonizing research practices and generating knowledge that serves Indigenous communities Shawn Wilson s book Research is Ceremony Indigenous Research Methods promotes the use of Indigenous research approaches rooted in Indigenous protocols ethics and knowledge systems 30 It emphasizes community engagement reciprocity and the affirmation of Indigenous perspectives and voices Similarly Linda Tuhiwai Smith highlights the importance of centering Indigenous worldviews and methodologies while respecting cultural protocols including obtaining free prior and informed consent 31 NAISA also promotes Indigenous research methods through various initiatives including organizing research methodology workshops developing Indigenous research ethics guidelines and providing platforms for sharing Indigenous knowledge and research findings They also support Indigenous researchers through mentorship programs networking opportunities and research funding emphasizing collaboration with Indigenous communities They also encourage community driven research that respects cultural protocols and community ownership 29 Implications of Western knowledge production and epistemologies editAs Western scientists and academics have and continue to take advantage of knowledge from and about Indigenous communities whether in publications 32 33 or through new pharmaceuticals 34 35 those Indigenous communities are excluded from control over the nature and usage of the newly created knowledge Thus Indigenous communities are spoken for and become the indigenous other as those institutional systems and structures reproduce a knowledge that becomes a commodity of colonial exploitation 36 This continues to reinforce the privileging of Western knowledge and epistemologies over non Western or Indigenous funds of knowledge or traditional knowledge in Western academia This privilege manifests itself when according to Norman K Denzin and Yvonna S Lincoln Indigenous knowledge systems are too frequently made into objects of study treated as if they were instances of quaint folk theory held by the members of a primitive culture 10 Indigenous decolonization seeks a dramatic shift in the subject of academic inquiry Rather than comparing Indigenous knowledge systems in comparison to empirical Western values Indigenous decolonization aims to reverse this perspective so that Western funds of knowledge are subjected to due examination and study en route to restoring Indigenous knowledge traditions and culture 10 There are specific advantages to applying Indigenous decolonization to practices and situations involving Indigenous peoples over alternative critical lenses such as critical theory or more specifically critical race theory According to Denzin and Lincoln critical theory s broad tenets of liberation and sovereignty are far too generalized for this application Critical theory must be localized grounded in the specific meanings traditions customs and community relations that operate in each Indigenous setting 10 Otherwise a critical theory that disregards context and embraces ubiquitous characteristics of social movements cannot guide meaningful change when applied to a specific Indigenous context In art edit nbsp An example of a piece within the new Indigenous and Canadian Gallery at the National Art Gallery of CanadaIndigenous artists have been using art as a form of activism for many years Jarrett Martineau and Eric Ritskes say that art forms are never separate from our political forms and Indigenous art thus occupies a unique space within settler colonialism both as a site for articulating Indigenous resistance and resurgence and also as a creative praxis that often reinscribes indigeneity within aesthetic and commodity forms that circulate in the capitalist art market 37 Art can be used in political struggle to bring attention to important issues and to better convey the experiences of Indigenous peoples Indigenous artists attempt to work outside of the binary of colonialism in their art Martineau and Ritskes describe Indigenous art as the generative expression of creativity not the violence of colonial domination and it is in Indigenous art s resistant motion to disavow the repetition of such violence that it recuperates the spirit of ancestral memory and place and forges new pathways of re emergence and return 37 See also editDeclaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Decolonize This Place Decolonization of knowledge Decolonization of museums Human migration Indigenous Survival during colonizationReferences edit a b c Smith L T 1999 Decolonizing Methodologies Research and Indigenous Peoples Zed Books Elliott Michael Participatory parity and indigenous decolonization struggles Constellations 2016 1 12 Hill Gord 500 years of Indigenous resistance PM Press 2010 a b Lees Anna 2016 09 27 Roles of Urban Indigenous Community Members in Collaborative Field Based Teacher Preparation Journal of Teacher Education 67 5 363 378 doi 10 1177 0022487116668018 ISSN 0022 4871 S2CID 152113071 a b Battiste Marie 2013 10 24 Indigenous knowledge and indigenous peoples education doi 10 18356 aa0ced95 en Retrieved 2021 03 09 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help LaGrand James B Vizenor Gerald 1996 Manifest Manners Postindian Warriors of Survivance The Western Historical Quarterly 27 1 87 doi 10 2307 969936 ISSN 0043 3810 JSTOR 969936 a b c King Lisa Gubele Rose Anderson Joyce Rain eds 2015 Survivance Sovereignty and Story Teaching American Indian Rhetorics doi 10 7330 9780874219968 ISBN 9780874219968 Lyons Scott Richard February 2000 Rhetorical Sovereignty What Do American Indians Want from Writing College Composition and Communication 51 3 447 468 doi 10 2307 358744 ISSN 0010 096X JSTOR 358744 King Thomas 2011 The Truth About Stories a Native Narrative House of Anansi Press ISBN 978 0 88784 895 7 OCLC 746746794 a b c d Denzin Norman Lincoln Yvonna Smith Linda 2008 Handbook of Critical and Indigenous Methodologies Thousand Oaks California Sage Publications doi 10 4135 9781483385686 ISBN 978 1 4129 1803 9 Cain Tiffany 2013 11 25 Decolonizing Methodologies Research and Indigenous Peoples 2nd Edition by Linda Tuhiwai Smith London and New York Zed Books 2012 240 pp Anthropology amp Education Quarterly 44 4 443 445 doi 10 1111 aeq 12032 ISSN 0161 7761 a b McDonough Sara 2013 Decolonizing Methodologies Research and Indigenous Peoples by Linda Tuhiwai Smith Collaborative Anthropologies 6 1 458 464 doi 10 1353 cla 2013 0001 ISSN 2152 4009 S2CID 144079116 a b c d e Grey Sam Patel Raj 2015 Food sovereignty as decolonization some contributions from indigenous movements to food system and development politics Agriculture and Human Values 32 3 431 444 doi 10 1007 s10460 014 9548 9 S2CID 55545504 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d Figueroa Helland Leonardo Thomas Cassidy Aguilera Abigail 2018 Decolonizing Food Systems Food Sovereignty Indigenous Revitalization and Agroecology as Counter Hegemonic Movements Perspectives on Global Development and Technology 17 1 2 173 201 doi 10 1163 15691497 12341473 via Brill a b c Asfia Gulrukh Kamal Dipple Joseph Linklater Rene Thompson Shirley 2015 Recipe for Change Reclamation of Indigenous Food Sovereignty in O Pipon Na Piwin Cree Nation Decolonization Resource Sharing and Cultural Restoration Globalizations 12 559 575 via Scholar s Portal Smith Linda Tuhiwai Decolonizing knowledge Research Justice Bristol University Press pp 205 210 doi 10 2307 j ctt1t89jrt 25 retrieved 2023 06 13 Grimshaw Mike 2008 08 21 Recovering the Sacred The Power of Naming and Claiming by Winona LaDuke Cambridge MA South End Press 2005 ISBN 13 978 0 89608 712 5 294 pp Implicit Religion 10 3 322 324 doi 10 1558 imre2007 v10i3 322 ISSN 1743 1697 a b Indigenous Languages Arts Cultures BC First Peoples Cultural Council First Peoples Cultural Council 2023 06 14 Retrieved 2023 06 14 Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival Helping Native communities create new speakers Retrieved 2023 06 14 Styres Sandra 2018 06 14 Literacies of Land Indigenous and Decolonizing Studies in Education Routledge pp 24 37 doi 10 4324 9780429505010 2 ISBN 978 0 429 50501 0 S2CID 197711037 retrieved 2023 06 14 Poitras Pratt Yvonne Louie Dustin W Hanson Aubrey Jean Ottmann Jacqueline 2018 01 24 Indigenous Education and Decolonization Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Education Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190264093 013 240 ISBN 978 0 19 026409 3 retrieved 2023 06 13 Tuck Eve Yang K Wayne 2012 09 08 Decolonization is not a metaphor Decolonization Indigeneity Education amp Society 1 1 ISSN 1929 8692 The Cultural Conservancy The Cultural Conservancy Retrieved 2023 06 14 a b Conclusion Interruptus Mohawk Interruptus Duke University Press pp 177 194 2020 12 31 doi 10 1515 9780822376781 008 ISBN 9780822376781 S2CID 241753567 retrieved 2023 06 14 Ashley Jeffrey S 2014 02 15 The Rights of Indians and Tribes by Stephen L Pevar Human Rights Review 15 1 103 104 doi 10 1007 s12142 014 0314 6 ISSN 1524 8879 S2CID 255518490 About Us Native American Rights Fund Retrieved 2023 06 14 Brant Jennifer 2014 10 09 Decolonizing Education Nourishing the Learning Spirit Brock Education Journal 23 2 doi 10 26522 brocked v23i2 398 ISSN 2371 7750 Brant Jennifer 2014 Decolonizing Education Nourishing the Learning Spirit Brock Education Journal 23 2 doi 10 26522 brocked v23i2 398 ISSN 2371 7750 a b About NAISA Native American and Indigenous Studies Association Native American and Indigenous Studies Association Retrieved 2023 06 14 Watson Robert 2012 05 30 Research is ceremony Indigenous research methods by Shawn Wilson The Canadian Geographer Le Geographe canadien 56 2 294 295 Bibcode 2012CGeog 56 294W doi 10 1111 j 1541 0064 2012 00419 x ISSN 0008 3658 Tuhiwai Smith Linda 2021 Decolonizing Methodologies Zed Books doi 10 5040 9781350225282 ISBN 978 1 78699 813 2 S2CID 241981019 Barsh Russel Lawrence 2001 Who Steals Indigenous Knowledge Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting 95 153 161 doi 10 1017 s0272503700056834 ISSN 0272 5037 S2CID 150738799 Bhukta Anindya 2020 06 18 Legal Protection for Knowledge doi 10 1108 9781800430631 ISBN 978 1 80043 066 2 S2CID 219905931 Pennacchio Marcello Ghisalberti Emilio L January 2000 Indigenous knowledge and pharmaceuticals Journal of Australian Studies 24 64 173 175 doi 10 1080 14443050009387569 ISSN 1444 3058 S2CID 54745135 Norchi Charles H 2001 Montgomery John D Inkeles Alex eds Indigenous knowledge as intellectual property Social Capital as a Policy Resource Boston MA Springer US pp 161 172 doi 10 1007 978 1 4757 6531 1 10 ISBN 978 1 4419 4871 7 S2CID 153825999 retrieved 2021 03 11 Akena Francis Adyanga September 2012 Critical Analysis of the Production of Western Knowledge and Its Implications for Indigenous Knowledge and Decolonization Journal of Black Studies 43 6 599 619 doi 10 1177 0021934712440448 ISSN 0021 9347 S2CID 143709815 a b Martineau Jarrett Ritskes Eric 2014 05 20 Fugitive indigeneity Reclaiming the terrain of decolonial struggle through Indigenous art Decolonization Indigeneity Education amp Society 3 1 ISSN 1929 8692 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indigenous decolonization amp oldid 1188722999, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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