#medievaltwitter an incredible thread up and down by @elysabethgrace on denial, erasure & burdens of Black scholars in the field. This particular point abt stepping aside & silencing your wyte voices is imperative but something many are unwilling to do. Pls read & digest.https://twitter.com/Elysabethgrace/status/1281327168912424960 …
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Replying to @ISASaxonists
As someone writing about Indigenous histories, can I ask a q? I agree absolutely with the underlying point here, & regularly direct enquiries to BlPoC people whose voices should be the ones foregrounded, but are you saying we should not research the histories of other cultures?
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Replying to @carolinepennock
I don't think anywhere in my tweet or Professor Hendrick's thread that's implied.
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Replying to @ISASaxonists
Thank you for clarifying. It was the tweet about being asked to refuse to write on BIPoC histories - I guess I misread it as meaning ‘at all’ and looking back she doesn’t quite say that. Sorry - very very long week.
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Replying to @carolinepennock @ISASaxonists
Indigenous studies has an entire methodological protocol and discussion about this. There are several decades of scholarship, white papers, reports about this. There is an entire separate area called settler colonial studies.
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Have you had extensive collaboration the the various tribes? Have they given consent? Are you giving them compensation, co-collaboration or resources? Are they just objects of study? Is it situated in their expertise, methodologies, communities, etc.
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