Joy Amid Ruin
In this paper, I reflect on the past decade as an educator and graduate student to highlight the joy that accompanied my shifting understanding of literacy. I conducted an autobiographical narrative inquiry and used selections from blog entries and graduate coursework in order to reflect on my “mome...
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
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Language and Literacy Researchers of Canada
2025-06-01
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| Series: | Language and Literacy: A Canadian Educational e-journal |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/langandlit/index.php/langandlit/article/view/29761 |
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| Summary: | In this paper, I reflect on the past decade as an educator and graduate student to highlight the joy that accompanied my shifting understanding of literacy. I conducted an autobiographical narrative inquiry and used selections from blog entries and graduate coursework in order to reflect on my “moments of turning”. I begin with a logocentric understanding of literacy as a white settler in two Indigenous communities, but over time embrace a multimodal, embodied, emergent, place-based, and more-than-human conception of literacies within a context of the climate and nature emergency. This conception learns from and with Indigenous ways of knowing rooted in ecology, relationships, and the land. I argue that this understanding of literacies brings joy and opens possibilities in a precarious world.
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| ISSN: | 1496-0974 |