Archive for the 'The rest' Category
The Opposite of Whiteness
Sunday, May 16th, 2010Three problems in whiteness discourse, and a fear of men’s support groups.
Whose knowledge? Reflexivity and “knowledge transfer” in postcolonial practice-based research.
Tuesday, October 20th, 2009In her book Decolonizing Methodologies, Linda Tuhiwai Smith describes how “theories about research are underpinned by a cultural system of classification and representation” that has commodified non-European forms of knowledge into the cultural archive and body of knowledge of the West. Today, the role of the West as a globally authorising culture has come into crisis; and with it the ideal of a consensual, anti-dialectical “human stock of knowledge” in the Popperian sense. Accepting the contention of feminist theorist Patti Lather that it is precisely in the aporia between paradigms that methodological inquiry lies, this paper proposes that practice-based research methods are uniquely equipped to develop our collective understanding of the urgent tensions and contradictions structuring postcolonial life.
Local Knowledge and New Media Theory
Saturday, March 15th, 2008Over the last four years, and with the support of numerous people including many in the Aotearoa Digital Arts network, I have been writing articles, giving talks, editing books, producing creative works and organising events that ask what it means for new media to consider the implications of indigenous knowledge, culture, and ways of being. This article summarises the theoretical learning from that work, with a view toward bringing an end to what Guillermo Gómez-Peña suggests is a necessary “hyperintensification” of certain cultural problematics that I have been engaging in over the last few years.
Reflections on the Politics of Practicality: Evaluating ICT for community development
Monday, October 15th, 2007Results-oriented development frameworks often continue to advocate what Iris Marion Young calls a ‘distributive paradigm’, without a holistic overview of the real outcomes for communities. Community practitioners can avoid some of these pitfalls in planning and evaluating their projects by looking beyond the project’s practical outcomes that may mask deeper levels of unintended consequences or lack of effectiveness. Central to this process is a need for detailed stakeholder engagement and active management of donor and funder expectations.
Pakeha / Tauiwi and Tino Rangatiratanga
Monday, February 12th, 2007My first presentation in Aotearoa to a primarily Maori (and non-academic) audience, on white settlers and indigenous self-determination. This was an introduction to a panel I organised for the Parihaka Peace Festival in 2007.
Craft, Context and Method: The Creative Industries and “Alternative Models”
Sunday, November 12th, 2006Alternative models are overrated. I attempt to justify this feeling by considering the insights of Judith Butler and Gayatri Spivak in relation to my own career trajectory through the creative industries. I also gesture at some thoughts about the “story” as a way of both understanding the limits of our practices and (paradoxically) making connections with others. I guess this is kind of a manifesto, although characteristically there is too much crammed too awkwardly together to be inspirational.
Cosmopolitanism, Nationalism, and the Creative Industries
Saturday, November 11th, 2006Every country would like to believe that its unique culture and creativity will be recognised and could form the platform for a new economy. But the cosmopolitans who develop cultural exports are always at odds with the nation, not to mention the place-bound classes.
Local Knowledge: Place and New Media Practice
Sunday, February 26th, 2006New media practice is often thought of as placeless. In reality, new media discourse and theory is invested in colonial culture and particular relationships to land. Recognising the difference between this and indigenous world-views in uses of new media shows the potential for reshaping our suppositions. Surfing gives an example of the ways different conceptions of place can exist in a given locality.
Cultural Futures recap
Sunday, February 19th, 2006A brief piece on the Cultural Futures symposium held at Hoani Waititi, December 2005
Interview with DB from Contested Commons/Trespassing Publics Conference, Sarai-CSDS, Delhi
Monday, January 16th, 2006An interview with Anand Taneja from Sarai-CSDS, discussing why I think the questions around indigenous knowledge have broader implications for contemporary politics. Also, a little personal background.
Biculturalism as Multiculturalism
Sunday, September 4th, 2005The biculturalism versus multiculturalism debate in New Zealand is tired. To develop either means opening our imaginations to an other possibility, rather than assuming there can be many possibilities without us changing. That is why Aotearoa New Zealand’s biculturalism is so interesting and challenging - but only if we take a bicultural approach to biculturalism itself. To understand more, we can to turn to feminist theory, particularly more psychoanalytically-inflected models. Also, Christchurch gives me the creeps. This is a very rough paper, not designed to be published, so excuse some poor grammar etc. But it does contain the idea of why I live in Aotearoa.
Give it up (blogging and the public)
Sunday, May 29th, 2005Why I stopped writing a weblog. The perils of public writing as a member of the dominant culture. And some unfortunate school memories. Although it was written in a more informal way, there is something in here which is the clearest expression of my background and the way it impels my writing projects.
On “New Zealand” “Studies”
Sunday, July 11th, 2004Why do my favourite Maori academics get so rarely cited by Pakeha New Zealanders? Partially because it’s difficult to maintain the coherence of the nation-state. This makes me suspect that undoing that coherence might be the key to cultural justice. My first academic paper on these issues.
Notes on Visiting Sarai, Delhi, Dec. 2003
Wednesday, March 3rd, 2004“The high-tech is an epistemological constraint I want to escape. That’s the secret of hybridisation. The biggest hybridisation is of course the sexual encounter which you want to escape and at the same time are seduced by. Yes, epistemologic constraints seduce me because they are outside of me, while at the same time I want […]