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Baawaajige
Author(s) -
Amy Shawanda
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
turtle island journal of indigenous health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2563-5506
DOI - 10.33137/tijih.v1i1.34020
Subject(s) - vision , indigenous , realm , honour , privilege (computing) , feeling , context (archaeology) , presentation (obstetrics) , colonialism , sociology , aesthetics , history , psychology , political science , anthropology , art , social psychology , law , medicine , ecology , archaeology , radiology , biology
  Baawaajige: my ideas for research are often revealed while sleeping. We as Anishinaabe People are able to connect to the spiritual realm through dreams. I will explore how Anishinaabe People utilize dreams and validate Indigenous ways of knowing without feeling shy and to be proud of where we obtain our knowledge. We need to normalize our dreams and visions within our writing. My conference presentation explores the use of dreams in academic writing as validated research. I want to privilege Indigenous research method and methodology that appears within our dreams, visions, and through fasting. How do we reference these in our academic writing? How do we provide context to such intimate moments between us and the Spirit World? How do we honour that knowledge in colonial academic papers? I will explore these questions while contributing to Indigenous research methods, and methodologies.

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