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Decolonising feminist methodologies: an epistemological politics of the racialised and feminised flesh

In: Handbook of Feminist Research Methodologies in Management and Organization Studies

Author

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  • Sara C. Motta

Abstract

In this piece I chart my journey-in-relation with feminist decoloniality as a methodological praxis of healing liberations and transformative justice. I walk us through the roots of this framework and its site/relationship of emergence to then move to three stories and ‘organisational’ moments in this on-going journey of feminised and decolonised unlearning and becoming anew-ancient in theory, practise and (self)relation. I explore these moments from my placedness in relation and responsibility as an Indigenous-Mestiza single mother, daughter, granddaughters and comadres of Colombian-Muisca, Eastern European Jewish and Celtic heritages, living, loving, re-existiendo on the unceded and sovereign lands of the Awabakal and Worimi peoples in so called South-East Australia. My mapping of these roots/routes is with the intent and intentionality to share the onto-epistemological and ethico-political roots, responsibilities, praxis and implications of the political and epistemological choice of walking in the borderlands of displacement and desire as a decolonial feminist. This choice is a commitment to not only our survivance but to our joyous wild flourishing as an imminent movement of this epistemological politics of the raced and feminised flesh.

Suggested Citation

  • Sara C. Motta, 2023. "Decolonising feminist methodologies: an epistemological politics of the racialised and feminised flesh," Chapters, in: Saija Katila & Susan Meriläinen & Emma Bell (ed.), Handbook of Feminist Research Methodologies in Management and Organization Studies, chapter 14, pages 220-238, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:20257_14
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    File URL: https://www.elgaronline.com/doi/10.4337/9781800377035.00022
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