Ethics of Response-Ability

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Revision as of 10:10, 27 February 2025 by Saskia (talk | contribs)

You have encountered a “Great White Beast”, a fleeting, shapeshifting figure that performs the world as indeterminate.

The ethics involved when it comes to drawing from research paradigms that consider the world as indeterminate, intra-dependent and ontologically generative, cannot be resolved through ‘right’ ways of doing things.

Non-Indigenous researchers engaging any form of generative ontologies need to take responsibility for whichever option they choose:


1. engaging Indigenous scholarship, or

2. not engaging Indigenous scholarship.


Neither option is “innocent.” There are no "easy ways out".

In dealing with this Great White Beast, I have chosen to rely on a very selective body of western scholarship.

I draw from this scholarship to formulate ways of thinking outside of the classic western subject/object divides, while not appropriating Indigenous paradigms.

Where appropriate, I have placed my journey in dialogue with Indigenous scholarship.

"Return" to cut 3 to start tracing the Bearwatch project.

Return to Cut 3: Wayfaring the BearWatch Project