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Decolonizing to Re-indigenize

November 14, 2019 Admin
Photo credit: Anahí NaranjoAn old home in a maize plantation outside of Guaranda, Ecuador. This is the home my mother grew up in.

Photo credit: Anahí Naranjo

An old home in a maize plantation outside of Guaranda, Ecuador. This is the home my mother grew up in.

Intro: Dr. Nēpia Mahuika’s September 26th workshop titled “Oral History and Indigenous Peoples: Rethinking Oral History, Methods, Politics and Theories” highlighted the intricate histories and traditions of indigenous communities that the academic field of oral history has begun to recognize. Dr., Mahuika is the author of soon to be published book Rethinking Oral History and Tradition from the Oxford University Press.

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In Workshop Reflections Tags oral history, knowledge, Oral History and Storytelling, language, speech, Storytelling, colonialism, Decolonize, indigenization, Indigenous, identity
5 Comments

Grant Me Serenity: A Case Study on How Alcoholics Anonymous Influences Life-History Storytelling

November 4, 2019 Admin
My father’s ten-year AA chip. It is a round gold coin with the words, “To thine own self be true,” around the edge. Inside is a large triangle with one word on each side. The words are: unity, service, recovery. In the center of the chip is a large …

My father’s ten-year AA chip. It is a round gold coin with the words, “To thine own self be true,” around the edge. Inside is a large triangle with one word on each side. The words are: unity, service, recovery. In the center of the chip is a large X (Roman numeral 10).

Current OHMA student Lily Doron tries to understand how Alcoholics Anonymous, and 12-Step programs in general, train participants to reframe their life narratives in ways that promote healing, foster connection, and, hopefully, keep people sober. She brings these questions from OHMA’s workshop with Emma Courtland to an interview with her father, an alcoholic who is currently 12 years sober. 

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In Workshop Reflections Tags oral history, knowledge, Oral History and Storytelling, language, speech, AA, Storytelling, Alcoholics Anonymous
6 Comments

Impediments

October 24, 2019 Admin

Samantha Greenspan discusses the power of words, the value of listening, and issues of legibility and marginalized languages. This blog post was inspired by Dr. Nēpia Mahuika’s workshop “Oral History and Indigenous Peoples: Rethinking Oral History, Methods, Politics and Theories.”

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In Workshop Reflections Tags oral history, knowledge, Oral History and Storytelling, language, speech, Indigenous, colonialism, indigenization
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