Article(electronic)February 23, 2018

Decolonizing interpretive research: subaltern sensibilities and the politics of voice

In: Qualitative research journal, Volume 18, Issue 2, p. 94-104

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Abstract

Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to explore the notion of decolonizing interpretive research in ways that respect and integrate the qualitative sensibilities of subaltern voices in the knowledge production of anti-colonial possibilities.


Design/methodology/approach
The paper draws from the decolonizing and post-colonial theoretical tradition, with a specific reference to Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's contribution to this analysis.


Findings
Through a critical discussion of decolonizing concerns tied to qualitative interpretive interrogations, the paper points to the key assumptions that support and reinforce the sensibilities of subaltern voices in efforts to move western research approaches toward anti-colonial possibilities. In the process, this discussion supports the emergence of an itinerant epistemological lens that opens the field to decolonizing inquiry.


Practical implications
Its practical implications are tied to discursive transformations, which can impact social and material transformations within the context of research and society.


Originality/value
Moreover, the paper provides an innovative rethinking of interpretive research, in an effort to extend the analysis of decolonizing methodology to the construction of subaltern inspired intellectual labor.

Languages

English

Publisher

Emerald

ISSN: 1448-0980

DOI

10.1108/qrj-d-17-00056

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