000 02245nab a22003737a 4500
999 _c6290
_d6290
005 20250625151511.0
008 190610s2019 -nz||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _aWeatherall, Ruth
_96915
245 _aEven when those struggles are not our own :
_bstorytelling and solidarity in a feminist social justice organisation
_cRuth Weatherall
260 _bWiley,
_c2019
500 _aGender, Work & Organization, 2019, Advance online publication, 20 May 2019
520 _aThis article draws on an 8 month ethnography in a feminist social justice organisation that supports survivors of domestic violence, and shares the storytelling practices that fostered solidarity. These storytelling practices stemmed from decades of decolonising work undertaken by Māori women to have their knowledge and ways of being equally integrated into the organisation. The storytelling practices, grounded in Māori knowledge, emphasised that the land is actively productive of our identity and knowledge; our actions and beliefs are part of a non‐chronological intergenerational inheritance; the personal is collective. I contend that these practices fostered solidarity and situated feminism in a collective history of localised struggle. Accordingly, this paper expands our imaginative capacity for how solidarity can be thought of and fostered between feminists in different contexts. (Author's abstract). Record #6290
650 _aADVOCACY
_94258
650 _aCOLONISATION
_95710
650 _aDOMESTIC VIOLENCE
_9203
650 _aFEMINISM
_9256
650 _aHISTORY
_9293
650 _aINTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
_9431
650 _aMĀORI
_9357
650 _aNARRATIVE TECHNIQUES
_9399
650 4 _aSUPPORT SERVICES
_9591
650 _aWOMEN
_9645
650 _2reo
_aKŌRERO NEHE
_98268
650 _2reo
_aTAIPŪWHENUATANGA
_95548
650 0 _aTIKANGA TUKU IHO
_95542
650 _2reo
_aTŪKINOTANGA Ā-WHĀNAU
_95382
650 _2reo
_aWĀHINE
_94040
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
773 0 _tGender, Work & Organization, 2019, Advance online publication, 20 May 2019
830 _aGender, Work & Organization
_98450
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1111/gwao.12386
_yRead abstract
942 _cARTICLE
_2ddc