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Showing posts with the label research

Decolonizing Methodologies

Linda Tuhiwai Smith. (2001). 4th ed. New York: Palgrave. Historically research about indigenous culture benefited those who "wielded it as an instrument" and the knowledge was not shared with the indigenous peoples. [ This reminds me of the privatization of indigenous knowledge through the patent system (Hardt & Negri, 2004) ] Under the influence of imperialism, research became institutionalized through scholary networks such as university transplantations, not through academic disciplines. The majority of researchers were rather like travelers who had curiosity toward the indigenous and spread the tales to the Western society, and moreover, knowledge gained through research was constructed around the Western bias. (pp.1-18). As one of the discourses of imperialism, the author categorizes post-colonialism or globalization as a discursive field of knowledge such that colonialism is not a finished business yet, which brings with new ways of exploration about the subject. He...