2020
DOI: 10.1111/apaa.12130
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7Learning to Listen: Stakeholder Perspectives on Gender at a Thule‐Era Alaskan Village

Abstract: This paper explores how feminist and indigenous archaeologies can ally to produce decolonizing heritage practice through intersubjective methods. Intersectional feminisms, particularly Native feminisms, suggest that focusing on local gender contexts in indigenous community research can subvert settler colonial systems, under which sexism and racism conspire to oppress Native people. I apply these insights about the decolonizing potential of localized gender research to a community‐centered project at Nunalleq,… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Lupu 2020; Rizvi 2020; Surface-Evans & Jones 2020) and foster shared understandings between archaeologists and communities with incommensurate worldviews (e.g. Arthur 2020; Raczek & Sugandhi 2020; Sloan 2020). Similarly, in a journal special issue on community archaeology in the African Diaspora, Jeffrey Burnett (2022) discusses how he synthesised Black feminist frameworks and CBPR approaches to foster radical solidarity with the community of Oak Bluffs in Massachusetts.…”
Section: Trends In Collaborative Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lupu 2020; Rizvi 2020; Surface-Evans & Jones 2020) and foster shared understandings between archaeologists and communities with incommensurate worldviews (e.g. Arthur 2020; Raczek & Sugandhi 2020; Sloan 2020). Similarly, in a journal special issue on community archaeology in the African Diaspora, Jeffrey Burnett (2022) discusses how he synthesised Black feminist frameworks and CBPR approaches to foster radical solidarity with the community of Oak Bluffs in Massachusetts.…”
Section: Trends In Collaborative Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(1) promoting harmful colonial legacies, (2) withholding data from stakeholders and (3) disenfranchising communities through research that is neither accessible nor useful for them (Atalay, 2012;Nicholas, 2008;Skinner, 2019;Sloan, 2020). Thus, it is We present a rapid supervised classification workflow by which cultural sites in Southwest Alaska might be readily identified through the analysis of vegetation patterns using multispectral satellite imagery.…”
Section: Collaborative Remote Sensing and Ethnoarchaeological Approaches For Understanding Cultural Landscapes In Southwest Alaskamentioning
confidence: 99%