You are here

Handbook of Critical and Indigenous Methodologies
Share

Handbook of Critical and Indigenous Methodologies

Edited by:


May 2008 | 624 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
The Handbook of Critical Methodologies covers everything from the history of critical and indigenous theory and how it came to inform and impact qualitative research and indigenous peoples to the critical constructs themselves, including race/diversity, gender representation (queer theory, feminism), culture, and politics to the meaning of "critical" concepts within specific disciplines (critical psychology, critical communication/mass communication, media studies, cultural studies, political economy, education, sociology, anthropology, history, etc. - all in an effort to define emancipatory research and explore what critical qualitative research can do for social change and social justice.
Norman K. Denzin and Yvonna S. Lincoln
Chapter 1. Introduction: Critical Methodologies and Indigenous Inquiry
 
Part I. Locating the Field: Performing Theories of Decolonizing Inquiry
Beth Blue Swadener and Kagendo Mutua
Chapter 2. Decolonizing Performances: Deconstructing the Global Postcolonial
Gaile S. Cannella and Kathryn D. Manuelito
Chapter 3. Feminisms From Unthought Locations: Indigenous Worldviews, Marginalized Feminisms, and Revisioning an Anticolonial Social Science
Gloria Ladson-Billings and Jamel K. Donnor
Chapter 4. Waiting for the Call: The Moral Activist Role of Critical Race Theory Scholarship
Christopher Dunbar Jr.
Chapter 5. Critical Race Theory and Indigenous Methodologies
Bryant Keith Alexander
Chapter 6. Queer(y)ing the Postcolonial Through the West(ern)
Joe L. Kincheloe and Shirley R. Steinberg
Chapter 7. Indigenous Knowledges in Education: Complexities, Dangers, and Profound Benefits
Michelle Fine, Eve Tuck, and Sarah Zeller-Berkman
Chapter 8. Do You Believe in Geneva? Methods and Ethics at the Global-Local Nexus
Henry A. Giroux and Susan Searls Giroux
Chapter 9. Challenging Neoliberalism’s New World Order: The Promise of Critical Pedagogy
Nathalia Jaramillo and Peter McLaren
Chapter 10. Rethinking Critical Pedagogy: Socialismo Nepantla and the Specter of Che
 
Part II. Critical and Indigenous Pedagogies
Manulani Aluli Meyer
Chapter 11. Indigenous and Authentic: Hawaiian Epistemology and the Triangulation of Meaning
Sandy Grande
Chapter 12. Red Pedagogy: The Un-Methodology
Cinthya M. Saavedra and Ellen D. Nymark
Chapter 13. Borderland-Mestizaje Feminism: The New Tribalism
Cynthia B. Dillard (Nana Mansa II of Mpeasem, Ghana, West Africa)
Chapter 14. When the Ground Is Black, the Ground Is Fertile: Exploring Endarkened Feminist Epistemology and Healing Methodologies of the Spirit
Christopher Darius Stonebanks
Chapter 15. An Islamic Perspective on Knowledge, Knowing, and Methodology
 
Part III. Critical and Indigenous Methodologies
Elizabeth Cook-Lynn
Chapter 16. History, Myth, and Identity in the New Indian Story
Keyan G. Tomaselli, Lauren Dyll, and Michael Francis
Chapter 17. "Self" and "Other": Auto-Reflexive and Indigenous Ethnography
Tony E. Adams and Stacy Holman Jones
Chapter 18. Autoethnography Is Queer
D. Soyini Madison
Chapter 19. Narrative Poetics and Performative Interventions
Radhika Parameswaran
Chapter 20. Reading the Visual, Tracking the Global: Postcolonial Feminist Methodology and the Chameleon Codes of Resistance
 
Part IV. Power, Truth, Ethics, and Social Justice
Russell Bishop
Chapter 21. Te Kotahitanga: Kaupapa Maori in Mainstream Classrooms
Tim Begaye
Chapter 22. Modern Democracy: The Complexities Behind Appropriating Indigenous Models of Governance and Implementation
Alison Jones, with Kuni Jenkins
Chapter 23. Rethinking Collaboration: Working the Indigene-Colonizer Hyphen
Gregory Cajete
Chapter 24. Seven Orientations for the Development of Indigenous Science Education
Marie Battiste
Chapter 25. Research Ethics for Protecting Indigenous Knowledge and Heritage: Institutional and Researcher Responsibilities
Wanda D. McCaslin and Denise C. Breton
Chapter 26. Justice as Healing: Going Outside the Colonizer's Cage
Antjie Krog, Nosisi Mpolweni-Zantsi, and Kopano Ratele
Chapter 27. The South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC): Ways of Knowing Mrs. Konile
Luis Mirón
Chapter 28. Transnational, National, and Indigenous Racial Subjects: Moving From Critical Discourse to Praxis
Yvonna S. Lincoln and Norman K. Denzin
Chapter 29. Epilogue: The Lions Speak

"They cover much ground, but [...] for this reviewer, two types of essays stand out as particularly valuable: those that address fairly concrete issues and situations, and those written by individuals who inhabit more than one conceptual universe. There are ample examples of both categories."

O. Pi-Sunyer
emeritus, University of Massachusetts
CHOICE magazine

Norman K. Denzin

Norman K. Denzin is Distinguished Emeritus Professor of Communications, College of Communications Scholar, and Research Professor of Communications, Sociology, and Humanities at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA. One of the world’s foremost authorities on qualitative research and cultural criticism, he is the author or editor of more than 30 books, including The Qualitative Manifesto; Qualitative Inquiry Under Fire; Reading Race; Interpretive Ethnography; The Cinematic Society; The Alcoholic Self; and a trilogy on the American West. He is past editor of The Sociological Quarterly, co-editor of six editions of the... More About Author

Yvonna S. Lincoln

Yvonna S. Lincoln is Professor Emerita at Texas A&M University, where she held the Ruth Harrington Chair of Educational Leadership and was Distinguished Professor of Higher Education. She is the coeditor of the journal Qualitative Inquiry, coeditor of the first through six editions of The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research, and coeditor of The SAGE Handbook of Critical and Indigenous Methodologies. As well, she is the coauthor, editor, or coeditor of more than a half dozen other books and volumes. She has served as the President of the Association for the Study of Higher Education and the American Evaluation Research Association,... More About Author

Linda Tuhiwai Smith

Purchasing options

Please select a format:

ISBN: 9781412918039
$195.00

SAGE Research Methods is a research methods tool created to help researchers, faculty and students with their research projects. SAGE Research Methods links over 175,000 pages of SAGE’s renowned book, journal and reference content with truly advanced search and discovery tools. Researchers can explore methods concepts to help them design research projects, understand particular methods or identify a new method, conduct their research, and write up their findings. Since SAGE Research Methods focuses on methodology rather than disciplines, it can be used across the social sciences, health sciences, and more.