Suʻifefiloi: A Samoan Methodology for Transdisciplinary Theorising in Cosmopolitan Worlds

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26686/jnzs.iNS33.7387

Abstract

As universities make moves toward transdisciplinary research, suʻifefiloi, the Samoan practice of sewing different parts together, offers a culturally grounded research methodology for transdisciplinary theorising by Pacific scholars. Pacific transdisciplinary actors working on theory within the cosmopolitan context requires, as Gordon writes, a willingness to go beyond discipline areas to produce knowledge. Theory work, as this paper argues, requires transdisciplinarity and a willingness to go beyond one’s discipline area to extend knowledge. Working with Tuhiwai Smith’s assertion on the importance of theory, this paper discusses the usefulness of suʻifefiloi in recent turns to transdisciplinarity.

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Author Biography

Lana Lopesi, Auckland University of Technology

Dr Lana Lopesi (Sāmoan/Pākehā; she/her) is an art critic, editor and author of False Divides (2018) and Bloody Woman (2021). Currently she is Editor-in-Chief for the Pacific Art Legacy Project, Editor for Marinade: Aotearoa Journal of Moana Art, and Arts Editor, Metro Magazine. She received her PhD in 2021 from Auckland University of Technology on Moana Cosmopolitan Imaginaries. Lana is a researcher for the Vā Moana -Pacific Spaces research cluster at Auckland University of Technology, where she also lectures in art theory

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Published

2021-12-14