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Critical reflexivity and decolonial methodology in island studies: Interrogating the scholar within

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 20:11 authored by Yasothara NadarajahYasothara Nadarajah, Elena Martinez, Ping Su, Adam Grydehoj
Although the field of island studies has from the start regarded itself as a defender of islands and islander interests, it is entangled in coloniality. This editorial focuses on issues of power, knowledge, and position. Who wields power in island studies? Who knows about islands? Where is island studies located, and how does it position itself? The paper discusses problems such as tokenism and forced inclusions, denial and circumscription of expertise, and onto-epistemological discrimination and hegemony within island studies. Ultimately, the paper advances the need for critical reflexivity and decolonial methodology within island studies, for pluralistic approaches to inclusivity and recognition of epistemic differences.

History

Journal

Island Studies Journal

Volume

17

Issue

1

Start page

3

End page

25

Total pages

23

Publisher

University of Prince Edward Island * Institute of Island Studies

Place published

Canada

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006116815

Esploro creation date

2023-10-27

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