Mele as methodology: crafting (k)new tools for Indigenous research

Author:

Saffery Maya L. KawailanaokeawaikiORCID,Lopes R. KeaweORCID,Goto KawehionālaniORCID,Kaomea JulieORCID

Abstract

PurposeIn Decolonizing Methodologies (1999), Linda Tuhiwai Smith asserted that “the master’s tools of colonization will not work to decolonize what the master built.” Smith challenged Indigenous researchers to fashion “new tools for the purpose of decolonizing and Indigenous tools that can revitalize Indigenous knowledge” (p. 22). A quarter of a century later, this paper reflects on the powerful impact that Smith’s call to action has had upon recent generations of bright, politically active and culturally grounded Native Hawaiian researchers, many of whom are innovatively turning to the Native epistemologies embedded in our traditional cultural practices to craft (k)new research tools and methodologies.Design/methodology/approachThis paper features three Native Hawaiian scholars who are simultaneously hula and mele (traditional Hawaiian dance and song) practitioners and who instinctively turned to their hula training to guide and indigenize their research practice.FindingsEach of these three scholars describes how they creatively applied the Hawaiian epistemologies embedded in their hula and mele training to fashion (k)new, Indigenous methodologies to guide (1) their research conduct, (2) their data analyses or interpretations and (3) the presentation of their research findings, respectively.Originality/valueThese three Hawaiian scholars and hula practitioners represent a larger groundswell of Native Hawaiian researchers who are bravely and creatively drawing upon the traditional wisdom and sensitivities embedded in our cultural practices to craft and wield (k)new research tools to “dismantle the master’s house” (Lorde, 1981) and build an Indigenous hale (house) of our own.

Publisher

Emerald

Reference33 articles.

1. Academy of American Poets (2014), “Glossary of poetic terms”, available at: https://poets.org/glossary/found-poem (accessed 25 March 2024).

2. Mele lāhui: the importance of pono in Hawaiian poetry;Te Kaharoa,2008

3. Embodied methodologies: challenges, reflections and strategies;Qualitative Research,2017

4. Merrie Monarch Hula festival fact sheet,2006

5. Edwards, S. (2013), “Nā te mōhio ka mātau: re-membering mātauranga Māori in localized practice”, in Edwards, S. and Hunia, R. (Eds), Dialogues of Mātauranga Māori: Re-membering, Te Wānagang o Aotearoa, Te Awamutu, NZ, pp. 42-62.

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