Wednesday, February 5, 2020

Embracing Indigenous Knowledge Systems within LIS


For if the knowledge systems that animate a culture are subjugated because they have been made invisible, called primitive or savage, one can easily be lulled into believing that the knowledge systems have been eliminated through an effective and uncompromising series of removals— removals from place, removals from people—all the while assuming a removal from meaning, and from animated being. In fact, though, these Indigenous knowledge systems are infinitely patient, assuming a posture of dormancy, waiting for the proper combination of events and agents to align and catalyze a dramatic and seemingly inexplicable change.[1]

In “Native America’s Twenty First Century Right to Know”[1] Allison Boucher Krebs reiterates and expands on Vine Deloria Jr’s 1978 speech about the right of Native peoples to “know the past, to know the traditional alternatives advocated by their ancestors, to know the specific experiences of their communities, and to know about the world that surrounds them.”[2] Both Krebs and Deloria recognize information and knowledge as crucial resources for the realization and safeguarding of Native Sovereignty and the general wellbeing of communities in the aftermath of colonial experiences that have disrupted Indigenous livelihoods, cultural practices and identities. As scholars such as Sandra Littletree and Cheryl Metoyer argue, Indigenous philosophy has much to contribute to the safeguarding of Native histories, knowledge traditions and sociocultural resources. It provides a more accurate, ontologically congruent and grounded framework for organizing, classifying, and cataloguing Indigenous knowledge and information. Yet, within Library and Information Studies (LIS) the role of Indigenous philosophy in knowledge organization remains an underexplored issue. Although a cohort of Indigenous scholars and their allies continue to work on expanding the field’s understanding of Indigenous issues, the dominant mode in the field tends to be rather limited. The primary focus remains on how to best incorporate materials about Indigenous people into Western knowledge organization and recordkeeping systems—there is little focus on what Indigenous philosophies can contribute to the field overall.[3]  


In this essay, I argue that the field of archival studies, and information studies more broadly, needs to more robustly engage with Indigenous philosophies, knowledge organization and archival frameworks as important sites of knowledge that have the potential to be transformative for the field. It is necessary that the discourse moves past its preoccupation on how to incorporate indigenous materials into Western knowledge organization frameworks. We need to have a more robust discussion and exploration of the possibilities of “Indigenous philosophy as the structure for organizing information.”[4] A primary way to realize this may be to more robustly support existing and encourage ongoing investigations into Indigenous knowledge organization and recordkeeping systems in various contexts.  It is my hypothesis that this will be fruitful for positively rethinking dominant values, principles, and practices within the field. Ultimately, as Krebs argues, this is a matter of preventing deliberate cultural genocide of Native philosophies as well as decolonizing the field of LIS.

Libraries, Archives and Museums scholar Tyson Rinio writes that “all cultures need to store and retrieve information.”[5] This simple, yet radical statement speaks to the fact that Indigenous people the world over have mechanisms through which they record, preserve and share information—a fact that is usually overlooked or not fully recognized within the archival studies literature. Indeed, no human society—orally based or otherwise, can exist without a robust knowledge organization, memory and recordkeeping mechanism. However, this simple reality is obscured by the fact that prevailing Western understanding (including those within LIS) assumes that only societies with written texts keep records—a colonialist perspective that privileges the written text (a very recent invention) while silencing the existence of multiple modes of recordkeeping dating back thousands of years.[6] Part of what drives this assumption is the widely held belief that the written word is not only a superior form of communication and recordkeeping, but also an example of civilizational superiority.[7] This is partly what explains the marginalization of nonwestern, and nontextual histories and recordkeeping mechanisms—an issue that obviously impacts IS.

In “Creating Spaces for Indigenous Ontologies”[8] Marisa Elena Duarte and Miranda Belarde-Lewis explore the role of colonialism in the devaluing of Indigenous ontologies within the field of libraries, archives, and museums. Specifically, they pay attention to the ways in which racial prejudice seeps into and shapes the production of subject headings and classification systems. Far from being neutral processes, they argue that classification and cataloguing are imbued with power relations that determine who gets to decide what terms, and names are used to classify a people’s cultural and historical materials. In a glaring example, they remind us that the origin of the term “American Indian” is rooted in a practice dating back to the late 1500s, when Spanish colonial authorities incorrectly referred to Indigenous people as “Indians.” Along with the term Indian, terms such as ‘Native American’ ‘American Indian’ emanated originally, not from the people’s own designation of themselves, but from the power of colonial state authorities to name and classify a community as they saw fit. Such a power to name and classify a people means that the way Indigenous people conceptualize and live out their own identities, affiliations and philosophies is flattened and obscured. Within LIS, this ontological flattening has a huge consequence as it not only contributes to the erasure of Indigenous self-conceptualization, but it also encourages continuing development of knowledge based on colonial, biased, imprecise, and sometimes outright incorrect/inaccurate information about entire communities.

Duarte and Belarde-Lewis pose an important question for the field of LIS, asking “how do we create new spaces for Indigenous ontologies to emerge?”[9] Using the example of the Mashantucket Pequot Thesaurus of American Indian Terminology Project, Littletree and Metoyer provide an answer by way of demonstrating both the limitations of Western knowledge organization frameworks and also the contribution of Indigenous philosophy to altering dominant modes of description, cataloguing and classification to create more nuanced, specific and culturally grounded information systems. As an example of Indigenous-based knowledge organization, the Mashantucket Pequot Thesaurus seeks to address the silences, confusions and erasures that are created when non-Indigenous vocabularies and models are employed to describe Indigenous relationships, peoples and objects within the field of LIS. It is an illustration of the rich possibilities offered when we look outside dominant paradigms of information organization.





[1] Krebs, Native America’s twenty-first century right to know.
[2]  Krebs, p. 173.  
[3] Kelvin White, Shilpa Rele, Yang Lu, Sue McKemmish, Anne Gilliland, and Andrew Lau. "Pluralizing the Archival Paradigm Through Education: critical discussions around the Pacific Rim." Archives and Manuscripts 35, no. 2 (2007).
[4] Sandra Littletree and Cheryl A. Metoyer. "Knowledge organization from an indigenous perspective: The Mashantucket Pequot thesaurus of American Indian terminology project." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 53, no. 5-6 (2015): 640-657: 641.
[5] Tyson S. Rinio. "Cultural Relevance in Tribal Libraries." Indigenous Notions of Ownership and Libraries, Archives and Museums 166 (2016): 181: p. 182.
[6] Fiona Ross, Sue McKemmish, and Shannon Faulkhead. "Indigenous knowledge and the archives: designing trusted archival systems for Koorie communities." Archives and Manuscripts 34, no. 2 (2006): 112.
[7] Linda Tuhiwai Smith. Decolonizing methodologies: Research and indigenous peoples. Zed Books Ltd. 2013.
[8] Marisa E Duarte and Miranda Belarde-Lewis. "Imagining: creating spaces for indigenous ontologies." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 53, no. 5-6 (2015): 677-702.
[9] Duarte & Belarde-Lewis, Creating Spaces for Indigenous Ontologies: 686.




[1] Allison B Krebs. "Native America’s twenty-first-century right to know," Archival Science 12, no. 2 (2012): 186.

No comments:

Post a Comment