Aesthetic Action
Point of beginning
Abstract
Introduction
Ever since the 1990’s there has been an ongoing and widespread interest among community-based environmental conservation researchers to engage with Indigenous Knowledge (IK). Such interest was initially mostly geared towards broadening and improving scientific knowledge and management in conservation research (see e.g., Freeman, 1992; Mailhot 1993; Berkes, 1994; Brooke, 1993; Inglis, 1993; Huntington, 2000). Over the last thirty years however, this question of how and whether it is even possible to relate knowledge systems rooted in two different ways of being and knowing the world - respectively western-based science and those knowledge systems specifically attributed to Indigenous peoples - has undergone major changes. Self-determination efforts, increased awareness around the need for western-based science to decolonize and become more inclusive, as well as a shifting paradigm regarding the relationship between the natural environment and Indigenous people, have all led for the efforts of knowledge relating in conservation research and management to become more equitable and inclusive. At least in theory. It has also been revealed to be a ‘site of significant struggle’ (Tuhiwai-Smith, 1999). Linda Tuhiwai-Smith identifies such struggle in research as taking place between ‘the interests and ways of knowing of the West and the interests and ways of resisting of the Other’ (ibid, p.2, capitalization in original). It brings to the fore questions of whose knowledge is deemed valid - according to whose qualifiers? And which research questions get asked in the first place. Whose interests are served with research? And who owns the research? Rather than a technical challenge of filling gaps in scientific knowledge, knowledge relating within environmental research and management has become more explicitly a question of relational encounter, and on whose terms such encounter takes place. The question of how to ethically relate Indigenous and non-Indigenous knowledges has increasingly been recognized to be just as much about Indigenous and settler(-state) reconciliation as it is about various forms of knowledge co-production and ethical engagement within research.
The Canadian Inuit, like the Norwegian Sami, have been at the forefront of Indigenous efforts around the globe to develop political structures and build autonomous governance regimes within their respective states (Wilson and Selle, 2019). The Inuit Tapirisat of Canada, now renamed Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami (ITK) was founded in 1971. As a representative organization, they pursued land claims and demanded a role in wildlife management. Their goals were for Inuit to ‘preserve the traditional way of life (…); enable them to become equal and meaningful participants in Canadian society; achieve fair compensation and benefits in exchange for their lands; and preserve the ecology of the Canadian Arctic’ (Lévesque, 2014 p.117). In 1993, their efforts led to the Nunavut act, creating the territory- and installing the Government of Nunavut (GN), funded through federal payments and representing all Nunavummiut (both Inuit and non-Inuit). At the same time the Nunavut Land Claim Agreement (NLCA) was passed. This ratified the Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. (NTI) with jurisdiction and responsibility to promote and develop Inuit culture and society in the domains of education, language, wildlife and culture. Wildlife management in Nunavut, as a result, is a co-management affair; a site of Inuit-Crown encounter with its terms of engagement outlined in the Aajiiqatigiinniq: Working Together agreement in 2011 (Government of Nunavut and NTI 2011).
The guiding policy document for polar bear management and research at the territorial level, is the Nunavut Polar Bear Co-Management Plan (Government of Nunavut, 2019). This document has been prepared by the GN-Department of Environment (Department of Environment) in cooperation with NTI, Regional Wildlife Organizations (RWOs), Hunters and Trappers Organizations (HTOs), and Inuit community members from throughout Nunavut. The plan refers to the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement (NLCA) as its overarching guiding framework in terms of conservation principles, which clearly reflects Inuit Qaujumajatuqangit (IQ); Inuit ways of knowing, -being and -valuing (reference). The NLCA is meant to ensure Inuit of meaningful engagement in the process of management and decision-making on polar bears, as well as IQ to be included in the data-collection that informs this decision-making process. In its executive summary the polar bear co-management plan even recognizes the heavy reliance on western-science for such data-collection in the past, and a commitment is made to increase use of IQ and Inuit participation in all aspects of its harvest management moving forward (GN, 2019). Although recent years have seen the rollout of large scale Inuit-led research programs and initiatives, much of the infrastructure around polar bear monitoring and decision making continues to prioritize western-based science and -values. Polar bear monitoring in Nunavut remains natural science-heavy, while the philosophical and political challenges involved in meaningfully engaging different knowledge systems extend beyond the training of many natural scientists. As a result, conciliating knowledge in Nunavut polar bear research is often reduced to the technical design of various interfaces between explicit, categorial and transmittable data. It rarely concerns matters of process, or conversations on knowledge as part of a larger culturally embedded ‘system’ of practices, values and…. (McGregor, 2021; …). What is at stake in current approaches around knowledge integration include concerns about ongoing (settler) colonialism and the politics of accessibility to knowledge (Tuck, 2009), as well as questions on the process and purpose of bringing different ways of knowing together, and whose interests are served by doing so (Simpson, 2001; 2004).
Knowledge relating as ethical engagement; practice, process and values
ITK reported in 2018 in their Inuit National Strategy on Research that, despite prevalent claims of knowledge co-creation or -integration in wildlife research reporting from the Canadian Arctic, Inuit are rarely involved with setting the research agenda, monitoring compliance with guidelines for ethical research, and determining how data and information about people, wildlife, and environment is collected, stored, used, and shared (ITK, 2018). This indicates that legislative agreements like the NLCA, on its own, are not enough to secure meaningful engagement between western-based science and IQ. Power dynamics around knowledge relating takes place ‘in-between, beyond and underneath formal structures’ (Lindroth et al., p.8, 2022). Such is reiterated by the Indigenous Circle of Experts who state that relationships need to be negotiated at all levels, and on an ongoing basis (ICE, 2018). Establishing ethical relationships is a regenerative, situated process, and needs to be renegotiated in every context, at all scales. Reform at the institutional level to support- and resource Inuit-led research is just as important as negotiating terms of engagement and developing ethical research practices at the situated research project level. Relating different knowledge systems in its most radical form, if at all, should therefore not only be employed as a praxis of inclusive research, but it should also be its precursor; establishing terms of engagement, defining what inclusivity means - and whether that should be the goal in the first place. The Ethical Space of Engagement (ESE), as a guiding framework has potential to reframe the challenge of knowledge relating away from one that is data-driven, towards one of process and practice, and to include such negotiation of terms of engagement.
The ESE, as formalized by Ermine in 2007, derives from Indigenous traditions of nation-to-nation conciliation, and can be applied to create a space or physical site that functions as an in-between; a meeting space that can facilitate trans-cultural dialogue and cross-validation between different communities, nations, or knowledge systems. By providing an in-between, or a ‘third space’ (see for another example of third space Turnbull, 1997), the model re-imagines opportunity for encounter and opens space to explore and practice the principles of respect and reciprocity underlying such encounter (Ermine, 2015; Indigenous Circle of Experts, 2018).
By engaging this framework to think of ethical space not as an absolute state or existing physical site, but rather in terms of how the ethical space can facilitate encounter(s) through an ongoing state of negotiation and becoming, as a field of tension and a coming together in difference, it parts from past science-based practices and may resist the western-based academic research establishment along the following lines;
Understanding knowledge relating as a set of practices and values: The western-based scientific tendency to compartmentalize knowledge(s) into narrow codifiable packages of data, conceptualizes the practice of knowledge relating as a static binary of siloed knowledge systems and a data gap to be navigated through approaches like ‘bridging- ‘, ‘integrating-’, ‘linking- ‘or ‘blending’ knowledges. As the ‘perceived degree of separation’ between different knowledges ‘narrow’ (Evering, 2012), intersecting spaces, interfaces or similarities among IK and western science are sought out, as to then create opportunities for collaboration, co-creation and co-learning on the premise of this ‘common ground’ (e.g., Foale, 2006; Berkes et al. 2006; Aikenhead and Michell, 2011). The theoretical ideal of such a common ground approach (see middle diagram in figure 1) focussed on similarity, and in practice often results in an integrative scientization of Indigenous Knowledges (see left diagram in figure 1). Scientization of indigenous knowledge happens when scientists only engage with those elements of IK, for example narrowly defined Traditional Ecological Knowledge, that allow for western-based categorisation (Agrawal, 2002), translation (Smylie, 2014) and validation (see Brook, 2005, in response to Gilchrist et al. 2005) – or where IK is ‘distilled’ and translated until nothing more is left than numbers and polygons prepared for easy incorporation into western-based research and management (Nadasdy, 1999; Agrawal, 2002). The consequences of such scientization are non-trivial. It does not only ‘displace the very thing it is meant to represent—the lived experience’ (Miller & Glassner 2004), it also renders knowledge integration ‘a neutral, technical exercise (…) towards which nobody can politically object’ (Nadasdy, 2005). The integration of TEK in western research and management framework becomes a technical problem to be solved (e.g., Huntington, 2005; Wenzel, 1999 ; Natcher and Davis, 2005; Clark et al. 2008). As such, knowledge integration can potentially assimilate Indigenous knowledge and people into Euro-Canadian governance systems, de-politicizing the system of co-management itself, and forming a barrier to self-determination (Nadasdy, 2003; Agrawal, 2002; Simpson, 2001; Stevenson, 2004; White, 2006; Ellis, 2005). Applying the ESE as a guiding frame, shifts thinking about knowledge relating from a static end-goal, towards a dynamic and ongoing state of becoming in a third space. This space, conceptually outside of each knowledge system, allows for the mediation of terms by which different are related. While cultural difference, diverse positionalities and institutional mediation between Indigenous peoples and western societies can all be acknowledged, it is the practice of negotiating encounter that is central to this framework. ‘The space offers a venue to step out of our allegiances, to detach from the cages of our mental worlds and assume a position where human-to-human dialogue can occur.’ (Ermine, 2007). The ESE takes into account relations, values, and knowledge and aims to build new agreement beyond those of already existing treaties or mandates. By focussing on such processes, it allows for knowledge relating to be approached as a political issue, rather than a technical project (e.g., Laurila, 2019).
Respecting incommensurability: The ethical space of engagement as a political frame also leaves room for irreconcilability; for elements of each knowledge system not to be engaged with (Simpson, 2001; Tuck and Yang, 2014) or to be considered sacred (Archibald, 2008). Knowledge relating that takes incommensurability into account, does not dismiss the project of encounter, but it embraces difference (Jones and Jenkins, 2008) and acknowledges the fact that processes needed for ethical engagement can claim space outside of western institutes (Robinson and Martin, 2016). It involves the resurgence of Indigenous knowledges, laws, languages, and practices as integral elements of Indigenous self-determination, rather than its incorporation into dominant way of knowing and being in the world (Corntassel 2012 ; Simpson, 2004; 2011, p 17). What is required from settler(-immigrant) researchers wanting to ethically and equitably engage with Indigenous knowledges and peoples, is solidarity rooted in the acceptance of difference rather than common ground, solidarity that endures in a state of unsettlement, and solidarity that accepts the existence of demarcated spaces, stories and culturally protected knowledge which remain sacred, and are to be kept within the community (Tuck, 2009; Tuck & Yang, 2014; Archibald, 2008). Such commitments need to move beyond theory, or metaphorical applications that allow for settler ‘moves towards innocence’ (Tuck and Yang, 2018). In accordance with the work of foundational Indigenous thinkers like Smith (1999), Wilson (2008) and Kovach (2010) it’s not so much about what you say you will do as a researcher, it’s about the practices that accompany those words and the consequences of such actions.
Knowledge as fluid and -ever becoming: Knowledge itself, like culture, is not static, and actively regenerated across time and space. Knowledge as something more practical/tacit that flows in-between, among, and around different performative bodies is often not acknowledged in more positivist traditions of science that seek static, objective and representative measurability. It however aligns well with Indigenous theories of knowledge that view ways of being and knowing as existing and manifesting through a web of more-than-human relationships. Many Indigenous people share an understanding of knowledge not as simply understanding relationships within Creation, but rather as Creation itself (McGregor 2004a). Knowledge is something one does. To ensure its ongoing existence, knowledge, like land, is something that needs to be practised, not harnessed, captured, incorporated or integrated. Knowledge as creation is constantly in motion. This convergent process itself reinforces the idea of knowledge in terms of ongoing practice, rather than historically static ‘tradition’ (Ingold, 2010). The middle circle of the ESE where different knowledge systems may ‘encounter’ is no different, rather than a static blending of data, it represents an ongoing process and practice of being with. This focus on process and practice of the ESE affirms Indigenous conceptualisations of knowledge as not being something to be accumulated or measured as neatly codifiable data, but rather something that proceeds along ways of life, and is then shared via narrative forms.
Arts-based Research
This manuscript considers how Arts-based research (ABR) can contribute to facilitating practices of knowledge relating within the affordances of the ESE framework. As both a research methodology and a paradigm (see Leavy, 2017) an ABR approach could arguably support the creation of ethical spaces, outside of western-based institutional thinking and settler futurities, that is required for ethical and equitable knowledge relating through its potential to upset the patriarchal/colonial gaze. Sara Kindon (in Robinson and Martin, 2016 p.147) describes this in the context of Canadian Truth and Reconciliation events by pointing out the affordances of the arts for artists, researchers, the researched and audiences to ‘’reposition themselves in the world’’ - and each other. Especially in times of concerns that ‘decolonization’ is becoming just an empty signifier; a metaphor, it becomes important to critically assess what one aims to exactly decolonize from and whether one employs decolonial methodologies, anti-colonial-, or rather (merely) critical ones that ‘recentre whiteness, (…) resettles theory, (…) extends innocence to the settler, [or] entertains a settler future’ (Tuck and Yang, 2012; Dey, 2020). Valuing the ‘rupturing’ quality as central to ABR research, as well as its view on open-endedness and invitation (e.g. Shields and Penn, 2016) embraces the potential of art in research, while also resisting the re-centring or re-settling that many other western-based research methodologies might. ABR can facilitate ways of viewing, conducting and presenting research, providing tools to engage in the ethical space of engagement, outside of the traditional western-scientific paradigm. Embodied practices, as a hallmark of ABR, help move away from dualistic thinking; the western-based ‘split between mind and body, nature and culture’ and opens opportunity for dialogue among different epistemic positions’ (Mbembe, 2016). As such ABR can actively deconstruct, challenge and decentre the dominance of western ways of knowing and establish other sites of ‘enunciation’ - rather than merely critiquing- and recentring them in the process (Bhabha, 2012; Simpson, 2004; Bhambra, 2014).
In the context of conducting research in the Arctic, an ABR approach can furthermore be important to retain space for thinking, acting, and knowing differently (see e.g. Åhäll, 2018,p. 38). Topics and questions that raise questions sooner than they offer solutions easily recede from the research agenda in a context where urgency is given to issues like international regulation, adaptation and geo-political power dynamics around resources (Lindroth et al., 2022). Especially for the challenge of ethical knowledge conciliation, we run a risk of missing out on opportunities that the arts and humanities could provide for researchers to engage in reflexive self-study and consider ‘alternative’ research and management paradigms outside of the Western traditions (see Kovach, 2009 p. 29). Nunavut polar bear monitoring so far has under-explored the potential of such approaches for slowing down and reframing knowledge relations, even when there is a clear need for new ways to practise more ethical and sustainable research relationships (e.g. Clark et al. 2008; GN, 2019). ABR could provide the interventions and ruptures needed to make the disconnect between reconciliation discourses on knowledge integration and the reality of ongoing appropriative practices in knowledge creation around polar bears, felt and seen by Western researchers. While aesthetic action, appreciation and experiences can perhaps attune us to different ways of knowledge relating.
Aesthetic Action and Affect
This manuscript discusses the use of aesthetic action as part of an ABR research methodology. More specifically it looks at how aesthetic action can facilitate knowledge relating through affective engagement within a large-scale Genome Canada supported project named; ‘BearWatch: Monitoring Impacts of Arctic Climate Change using Polar Bears, Genomics and Traditional Ecological Knowledge’. The purpose of such an approach is to move beyond theory and away from more conventional and technical, data-focussed approaches, towards ethical knowledge relating practices and affective encounters within the project.
Aesthetic action, in the way I apply it as a concept in my research, is inspired by Dylan Robinson and Keavy Martin, who explore structural and stylistic choices as well as practices like staging as a lens to understand affective engagements among different participant and their material surroundings at Truth and Reconciliation events (Robinson and Martin, 2016). Like them, I understand aesthetics as pre-Kantian aesthesis (Baumgarten, 1735) that moves away from moral judgement of artistic beauty, towards more material and sensuous encounters between bodies and the affective forces created in such actions. What delineates an aesthetic action from any other action, is the intentionality of either the action itself, the artist or the aesthetic experience of the participating actor. However, this is a slippery terrain – since the parameters used to judge such intentions become quickly entangled with western philosophies of art, which engages questions of morality and virtue.
Robinson and Martin point out the risk of alienating the Indigenous communities that we work with, by invoking concepts that are strongly related to western categories and research ethics. It is however, for its sensuous and affective quality that I find this pre-Kantian understanding of aesthetics worth exploring within a trans-cultural research endeavour. My application of aesthetics aligns with contemporary thinkers that focus on embodied, day-to-day- (Kupfer, 2015 ; Mandoki, 2016 ; Saito, 2022), spatial- (Berleant, 1997), sensorial (Pink?), and affective experience between multiple bodies. Allowing for aesthetic actions to include everyday practices like telling, making, talking, walking, sharing, giving, and receiving, makes aesthetics a particularly suitable lens to explore transcultural knowledge encounters as practice-based. Focussing on the aesthetic experiences of daily-practices that are often already part of any on-the-land research project in Nunavut, regardless of their disciplinary design, can in turn help us understand the potential of such actions for the ethical knowledge relating. Aesthetic action at the site of encounter allows for particular affective experiences and responses that unsettle us, provoke us, or even invite us to participate, which does not only make them political (see Ranciere, 2004) - they also move beyond mere discursive interpretations (Thrift, 2008) and bring back the human and more-than-human body into the equation (e.g. Yusoff, 2010).
Aesthetic action and the ESE
How we understand aesthetic action within a framework of the ethical space of engagement requires tackling the issue of ethics in a transcultural context. Contemporary western aesthetics combine ethics and aesthetics under value theory. The Aristotelean understanding of value theory would see us make moral choice based on our values to optimize ourselves as a virtuous person. But within this virtue theory, how we know something is moral depends on the values we hold – and those values are culturally loaded. As mentioned above, I aim to stay away from such moral understanding of aesthetics, due to their strong affiliations with western paradigms which I try to decentre.