Epistemic Violence in Research on Eldercare

Pub Date : 2020-08-21 DOI:10.1177/0971333620936948
Darlingtina K. Esiaka, G. Adams
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Decolonial perspectives challenge the notion that standard knowledge in hegemonic psychology is productive of progress and enlightenment. They instead emphasise its association with the colonial violence that constitutes the darker underside of modern development. Our contribution to the special issue applies a decolonial perspective to theory and research on obligation to an elderly parent. Thinking from the standpoint of West African epistemic locations not only illuminates the culture-bound character of standard models but also reveals their foundations in modern individualist selfways. Although modern individualist selfways can liberate well-endowed people to pursue fulfilling relationships and avoid unsatisfying connections with burdensome obligations, these ways of being pose risks of abandonment for people—like many elders—whose requirements for care might constitute a constraint on others’ satisfaction. In contrast, the cultural ecologies of embedded interdependence that inform everyday life in many West African settings afford selfways that emphasise careful maintenance of existing connections. Although these selfways may place constraints on the self-expansive pursuit of satisfying relationships, they provide elders and other vulnerable people with some assurance of support.
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老年护理研究中的认知暴力
非殖民化的观点挑战了霸权心理学中的标准知识是进步和启蒙的产物的观念。相反,他们强调它与殖民暴力的联系,殖民暴力构成了现代发展的黑暗面。我们对特刊的贡献将非殖民化的观点应用于对年迈父母义务的理论和研究。从西非认识位置的角度进行思考,不仅阐明了标准模型的文化约束特征,而且揭示了它们在现代个人主义自我方式中的基础。尽管现代个人主义的自我方式可以解放富有的人,让他们追求充实的关系,避免与繁重的义务建立不令人满意的关系,但这些存在方式给人们带来了被抛弃的风险,就像许多老年人一样,他们对照顾的要求可能会限制他人的满意度。相比之下,在许多西非国家的日常生活中,相互依存的文化生态提供了强调谨慎维护现有联系的自我方式。尽管这些自我方式可能会限制对满足关系的自我膨胀追求,但它们为老年人和其他弱势群体提供了一些支持的保证。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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