How do we begin to connect to those who are no longer living, those who have been historically silenced, and those whose memory becomes a faint existence in our modern, colonial imaginary? Within Decolonial Feminist Research: Haunting, Rememory, and Mothers, Jeong-eun Rhee, a qualitative educational researcher, examines the tension that often accompanies the implementation of decolonial feminist knowledges, methodologies, and epistemologies, especially when these theoretical perspectives challenge the academic canon rooted in modernity and social scientific empirical realities. This review addresses Rhee’s major theoretical conceptualizations such as Rememory, M/others and Haunting throughout the various processes that often connect individ...
Life after Leaving is an innovative, creative, and amazing autoethnographic work in which Tamas expl...
This chapter outlines some conceptual issues in doing arts-based decolonised research. In the ch...
In the call for this special issue we, incoming editors of PINS, expressed the desire to build on th...
In this chapter I draw on a Leverhulme funded research project of listening to migrant and refugee w...
This is the sixth webinar in a six-part series from NCRM called Decolonial Research Methods: Resisti...
My dissertation makes an argument for a decolonial move in rhetorical memory studies to more ethical...
A decolonial feminist ethnography is an empowering research methodology that can situate the knowled...
This study used participatory oral history and digital archiving to explore two interrelated questio...
We present "retrospective autoethnographies" as a methodology for decolonial inquiry/intervention in...
This qualitative study explores the experiences of low-income women undergraduates in a community co...
The chapter opens with a reconsideration of earlier feminist thinkers and their theorizations of the...
Black feminisms challenge Western conceptions of linearity as an optic for understanding the experie...
Western-centric epistemologies are often deemed to be more legitimate than non-western ones for driv...
As people around the world continue to have their voices, desires, and movements restricted, and the...
Feminist theories in management and organization studies, each with their own ontological and episte...
Life after Leaving is an innovative, creative, and amazing autoethnographic work in which Tamas expl...
This chapter outlines some conceptual issues in doing arts-based decolonised research. In the ch...
In the call for this special issue we, incoming editors of PINS, expressed the desire to build on th...
In this chapter I draw on a Leverhulme funded research project of listening to migrant and refugee w...
This is the sixth webinar in a six-part series from NCRM called Decolonial Research Methods: Resisti...
My dissertation makes an argument for a decolonial move in rhetorical memory studies to more ethical...
A decolonial feminist ethnography is an empowering research methodology that can situate the knowled...
This study used participatory oral history and digital archiving to explore two interrelated questio...
We present "retrospective autoethnographies" as a methodology for decolonial inquiry/intervention in...
This qualitative study explores the experiences of low-income women undergraduates in a community co...
The chapter opens with a reconsideration of earlier feminist thinkers and their theorizations of the...
Black feminisms challenge Western conceptions of linearity as an optic for understanding the experie...
Western-centric epistemologies are often deemed to be more legitimate than non-western ones for driv...
As people around the world continue to have their voices, desires, and movements restricted, and the...
Feminist theories in management and organization studies, each with their own ontological and episte...
Life after Leaving is an innovative, creative, and amazing autoethnographic work in which Tamas expl...
This chapter outlines some conceptual issues in doing arts-based decolonised research. In the ch...
In the call for this special issue we, incoming editors of PINS, expressed the desire to build on th...