野外工作不适

IF 1.5 Q2 GEOGRAPHY
L. Slater
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引用次数: 0

摘要

不适会使人怀疑自己对现实的想当然的描述。因此,对于像我这样从事与第一民族社区合作研究项目的殖民学者来说,不适是必要的伴侣。在这篇文章中,我调到我自己的不适来探索它破坏我的知识实践的生成潜力。为此,我即兴引用了丽莎·史蒂文森(Lisa Stevenson)的《不确定性中的田野工作》(2014)。不舒服的田野工作是关注我的“事实”何时动摇,以及我何时触及我的认识论极限。我回想起在与澳大利亚新南威尔士州布伦格尔-图穆特(Brungle-Tumut)的Wolgalu和Wiradjuri原住民社区合作项目时的不适时刻。该项目旨在重振该社区与一种具有生态重要性的物种的联系:corroboree青蛙——一种极度濒危且具有重要文化意义的物种,Wolgalu民族称之为Gyack (Williams, 2019)。一个涉及来自不同认知传统的人的合作项目要求参与者注意不共享的内容。毕竟,要照顾Gyack,就需要照顾不同的知识实践。不适是一种了解我无法了解的事情的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Fieldwork in Discomfort
Abstract Discomfort can make one doubt one’s taken-for-grant accounts of reality. Thus, for settler colonial scholars—such as myself—undertaking collaborative research projects with First Nations communities, discomfort is a necessary companion. In this article, I tune into my own discomfort to explore its generative potential to disrupt my knowledge practices. To do so, I improvise with Lisa Stevenson’s ‘fieldwork in uncertainty’ (2014). Fieldwork in discomfort is paying attention to when my ‘facts’ falter and I butt up against my epistemological limits. I reflect upon moments of discomfort during a collaborative project with the Wolgalu and Wiradjuri First Nations community in Brungle-Tumut (New South Wales, Australia). The project aims to revitalise the community’s connection to a species of ecological importance: the corroboree frog—a critically endangered and culturally important species, whom the Wolgalu nation call Gyack (Williams, 2019). A collaborative project involving people from different epistemic traditions demands of participants an attentiveness to what is not shared. Afterall, to take care of Gyack requires taking care of, and with, divergent knowledge practices. Discomfort is a method of coming to know what I cannot know.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
20.00%
发文量
57
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