The ESE (Space): Difference between revisions

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Figure 1: The Ethical Space Diagram, originally published by the IISAAK OLAM foundation (2019). Re-used with permission.
Figure 1: The Ethical Space Diagram, originally published by the IISAAK OLAM foundation (2019). Re-used with permission.


Becoming a wayfarer in this research entails a willingness on your part to become an active and immersed agent in the ongoing material opening and closing of for meaning-making. When looking out over this Vista, you wonder what it means in the thick moment/um of reconciliation to ethically engage with the experiences of Gjoa Haven community members in accordance with the guiding principles of a "third" space.
<div class="next_choice">The concept of Aesthetic Encounter, as I used it in my research, holds resonance with the ESE in different ways. Return to the main cut, to learn in which ways.</div>
 
<div class="next_choice"> To better understand the extent of your response-abilities as a wayfarer in this knowledge-land-scape it is important to determine the boundaries and possibilities of such a particular social contract, before you continue. If you have not yet checked out the terms of engagement of this knowledge-land-scape, you should check them out. Find them on the bottom right of your screen.
 
Otherwise, decide to return to your original path and continue tracing the BearWatch researchers across this knowledge-land-scape landscape, as they seek to collaborate with the Gjoa Haven HTA on their needs for recognition. </div>
 


<span class="return to-cut-2 link" data-page-title="Aesthetic Action" data-section-id="4" data-encounter-type="return">[[Aesthetic Action#Aesthetic Action and the ESE|Return to Cut 2: Aesthetic Action and the ESE]]</span>
<span class="return to-cut-2 link" data-page-title="Aesthetic Action" data-section-id="4" data-encounter-type="return">[[Aesthetic Action#Aesthetic Action and the ESE|Return to Cut 2: Aesthetic Action and the ESE]]</span>

Revision as of 17:05, 16 January 2025

You have found a vista. A vista is a site from which a particular view or prospect is offered. Vistas can quite literally offer a horizon to assist in your navigation, like the outline of rock formations and shorelines would do within Inuit Nunangat. In the case of my knowledge-land-scape, they offer “visions”, mental images that may serve as guidelines to set out and adjust your course during the journey to come.

In this particular case, you are presented with the guiding principles of the ‘Ethical Space of Engagement’ (ESE), as proposed by Sturgeon Lake First Nation elder Willie Ermine (Ermine 2007). The ESE, is a “third space” approach, through which differentiated nations or collectives might negotiate ethical encounters with each other in an ‘ethical’ space that belongs to neither. This third space emerges both through principled practices (like for example negotiating terms of engagement), and as a guiding model for willing partners to re-position themselves in-equitable-encounter (Ermine, 2007; Ermine 2015; Indigenous Circle of Experts 2018). When taking the ESE as a guiding frame, ethics are no longer a pre-emptive box to tick nor a static end-goal. Ethical research is rather performed as a dynamic practice of encountering which requires ongoing negotiation.

Figure 1: The Ethical Space Diagram, originally published by the IISAAK OLAM foundation (2019). Re-used with permission.

The concept of Aesthetic Encounter, as I used it in my research, holds resonance with the ESE in different ways. Return to the main cut, to learn in which ways.

Return to Cut 2: Aesthetic Action and the ESE