What Can Indigenous Feminist Knowledge and Practices Bring to “Indigenizing” the Academy?

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Kim Anderson
Elena Flores Ruíz
Georgina Tuari Stewart
Madina Tlostanova

Abstract

More than a decade has passed since North American Indigenous scholars began a public dialogue on how we might “Indigenize the academy.” Discussions around how to “Indigenize” and whether it’s possible to “decolonize” the academy in Canada have proliferated as a result of the Truth and Reconciliation of Canada (TRC), which calls upon Canadians to learn the truth about colonial relations and reconcile the damage that is ongoing. Indigenous scholars are increasingly leading and writing about efforts in their institutions; efforts include land- and Indigenous language-based pedagogies, transformative community-based research, Indigenous theorizing, and dual governance structures. Kim Anderson’s paper invites dialogue about how Indigenous feminist approaches can spark unique Indigenizing practices, with a focus on how we might activate Indigenous feminist spaces and places in the academy.


In their responses, Elena Flores Ruíz uses Mexican feminist Indigenizing discourse to ask what can be done to promote plurifeminist indigenizing practices and North-South dialogues that acknowledge dynamic Indigenous pasts and diverse contexts for present interactions on Turtle Island. Georgina Tuari Stewart proceeds to describe Mana Wahine indigenous feminist theory from Aotearoa before proceeding to develop a “kitchen logic” of mana, which parallels Anderson’s understanding of tawow. Finally, Madina Tlostanova reflects on how several ways of advancing indigenous feminist academic activism described by Anderson intersect with examples from her own native Adyghe indigenous culture divided between the neocolonial situation and the post-Soviet trauma.

Article Details

How to Cite
Anderson, K., Flores Ruíz, E., Stewart, G. T., & Tlostanova, M. (2019). What Can Indigenous Feminist Knowledge and Practices Bring to “Indigenizing” the Academy?. Journal of World Philosophies, 4(1), 121–155. Retrieved from https://scholarworks.iu.edu/iupjournals/index.php/jwp/article/view/2646
Section
Symposium
Author Biographies

Kim Anderson

Dr. Kim Anderson is a Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Relationships and an Associate Professor in the Department of Family Relations and Applied Nutrition at the University of Guelph, Canada. She has published over thirty peer-reviewed book chapters and articles covering the subjects of Indigenous female identity, Indigenous mothering, Indigenous family well-being, Indigenous feminism, Indigenous women and governance, Indigenous masculinities, and research ethics in Indigenous communities. Dr. Anderson is the single author of two books (A Recognition of Being: Reconstructing Native Womanhood, 2nd Edition, Canadian Scholar’s Press, 2016; and Life Stages and Native Women: Memory, Teachings and Story Medicine, University of Manitoba Press, 2011),  and has recently published her fourth co-edited book—a scholarly anthology about missing and murdered Indigenous women, co-edited with Maria Campbell and Christi Belcourt (Keetsahnak: Our Missing and Murdered Indigenous Sisters, University of Alberta Press, 2018). 

Elena Flores Ruíz

Elena Flores Ruíz is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Global Studies at Michigan State University, USA. She is Core Faculty in American Indian and Indigenous Studies, Chicanx and Latinx Studies, and GenCen. She works on structural violence and gender-based violence. She is from Ciudad de México, México.

Georgina Tuari Stewart

Georgina Tuari Stewart is an Associate Professor in the School of Education, Auckland University of Technology. Formerly she worked as a secondary school teacher of science, mathematics, and Māori, in both English-medium and Māori-medium schools. She completed doctoral studies on the Māori science curriculum in 2007, with significant subsequent publications on topics in Kaupapa Māori, science education, and philosophy of education. Georgina is currently completing a Marsden Fund research project investigating academic writing in Māori.

Madina Tlostanova

Madina Tlostanova is decolonial thinker, fiction writer, and professor of postcolonial feminisms at Linköping University (Sweden). She focuses on decolonial thought, feminisms of the Global South, postsocialist sensibilities, fiction, and art. Her most recent books include Postcolonialism and Postsocialism in Fiction and Art: Resistance and Re-existence (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017) and What Does it Mean to be Post-Soviet? Decolonial Art from the Ruins of the Soviet Empire (Duke University Press, 2018).