Decolonizing gender roles in pacific women's writing: Indigenous feminist theories and the reconceptualization of women's authority Article

Moura-Kocoglu, M. (2017). Decolonizing gender roles in pacific women's writing: Indigenous feminist theories and the reconceptualization of women's authority . CONTEMPORARY WOMENS WRITING, 11(2), 239-258. 10.1093/cwwrit/vpx015

cited authors

  • Moura-Kocoglu, M

abstract

  • This article sets the critical analysis of gender dynamics in Pacific women's literature in a decolonizing context of trans-Indigenous feminist theories. Māori author Patricia Grace, and Indigenous Australian writer and scholar Melissa Lucashenko center storytelling as a critical methodology in establishing Aboriginality as the central knowledge regime in their writing. Within the framework of a trans-Indigenous methodology, the present study is grounded on and engages with Indigenous feminist theories from the Pacific and beyond: A recognition of multiply situated knowledge and "herstories" establishes female connection to land, spirituality, and community, alongside experiences of colonial invasion and oppression, as key commonalities in Indigenous writing. Through storytelling, Grace and Lucashenko envision gender regimes that reflect Indigenous women's complexity, as well as authority, positioning Indigenous Pacific women as active agents in confronting sexist patriarchal hegemony, and instrumental for creating balance in gender relations, family, community, and nation, amid complex processes of decolonization.

publication date

  • July 1, 2017

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 239

end page

  • 258

volume

  • 11

issue

  • 2