研究成果展示的非殖民化:通过诗意再叙事放大认识论权威

Narrative Works Pub Date : 2024-01-30 DOI:10.7202/1108959ar
Cathy Raymond
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摘要

在推动学术研究和知识生产方面,以西方为中心的认识论往往被认为比非西方认识论更合法。因此,在研究过程中,非西方的认识论往往被殖民化或被压制。非殖民化研究实践,如有力的合作、相互尊重、用心倾听和共同建构的访谈,为有志于参与研究的研究人员提供了有意义的机会,这种研究尊重并放大了多种多样的传奇经历和非主导认识论。本文的重点是通过诗意地再现故事来实现研究报告写作的非殖民化,并将包括对帕尔瓦娜(Parvana)的叙事调查项目研究成果进行诗意再现故事的理由和摘录,帕尔瓦娜是一名阿富汗妇女,直到最近还生活在阿富汗。通过使用开放式访谈的原始摘录、共同构建的访谈对话、帕尔瓦娜的书面故事、关于人工制品的对话以及其他数据源,帕尔瓦娜和我共同以诗歌的形式精心制作了研究成果,从而扩大并尊重了她的认识权威和读写实践。除了用研究参与者自己的话来介绍研究成果外,通过诗歌创造性地重新讲述研究成果,还能让学术界和非学术界的受众都能了解研究成果,同时还能培养情感参与和共鸣。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Decolonizing the Presentation of Research Findings: Amplifying Epistemic Authority Through Poetic Re-Storying
Western-centric epistemologies are often deemed to be more legitimate than non-western ones for driving academic research and knowledge production. As a result, non-western epistemologies are often colonized or silenced during the research process. Decolonizing research practices, such as robust collaboration, mutual respect, mindful listening, and co-constructed interviews offer meaningful opportunities for researchers vested in engaging in research which honors and amplifies a diversity of storied experiences and non-dominant epistemologies. This paper focuses on decolonizing research report writing through poetic re-storying and will include a rationale for and excerpts from a poetic re-storying of research findings from a narrative inquiry project with Parvana, an Afghan woman who until recently was living in Afghanistan; the narrative study is theoretically and conceptually informed by postcolonial feminist theory and the decolonization of research methods. By carefully and collaboratively crafting the research findings in poetic form using original excerpts from open-ended interviews, co-constructed interview conversations, Parvana’s written stories, conversations about artifacts, and other data sources, Parvana and I worked together to amplify and honor her epistemic authority and literacy practices. In addition to presenting the research findings in research participants’ own words, creative re-storying through poetry makes research findings accessible to academic and non-academic audiences alike while also cultivating emotional engagement and empathy.
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