Everyone and everything is a boundary object – an empirical account from a modest human boundary object
Author(s) -
Yasunori Hayashi
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
learning communities international journal of learning in social contexts
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2202-7904
pISSN - 1329-1440
DOI - 10.18793/lcj2020.26.09
Subject(s) - object (grammar) , boundary object , boundary (topology) , computer science , artificial intelligence , mathematics , mathematical analysis , geography , cartography , scale (ratio)
In this paper, I grapple with the application of a boundary object, in its position at the centre of a cross-cultural project in Indigenous northern Australia involving discrete knowledge communities—Yolŋu Indigenous landowners and hydrogeologists engaging in the hope of developing a community-led water management plan. Although I was officially assigned as a community engagement officer and a language translator, I found myself becoming a boundary object, comparable to a three-dimensional map of Aboriginal land. My positionality was considerably unsettling at times due to a culmination of disconcertments surfacing from my figure as a knower adopted into Yolŋu kinship system, as modest kin to the Yolŋu Aboriginal landscape of land and people. As a witness to the ways in which Yolŋu family live and care for their environment with the absence of centrality, I extend the notion of boundary object to the central understandings of Yolŋu kinship practice, where everyone and everything is a boundary object.
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