Two‐Eyed Seeing as a strategic dichotomy for decolonial nursing knowledge development and practice

Author:

McFadden Alysha1ORCID,Lynam M. Judith1,Hawkins Lorelei2

Affiliation:

1. UBC School of Nursing The University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada

2. Raven Wing, Elder in Residence, Stepping Stone Vision, Raycam Cooperative Centre City of Vancouver Community Services Vancouver British Columbia Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe profession of nursing has recognized the need for contextual and relational frameworks to inform knowledge development. Two‐Eyed Seeing is a framework developed by Mi'kmaw Elders to respectfully engage with Indigenous and non‐Indigenous knowledges. Some scholars and practitioners, however, are concerned that Two‐Eyed Seeing re‐instantiates dichotomized notions regarding Western and Indigenous knowledges. As dichotomies and binaries are often viewed as polarizing devices for nursing knowledge development, this paper explores the local worldviews in which Two‐Eyed Seeing emerged, proposing that the onto‐epistemological and axiological ‘roots’ of the framework are antithetical to divisiveness, paradoxically asserting space for the dichotomy to stand. Two‐Eyed Seeing, if understood as a relational, decolonial praxis, could fundamentally change the way nursing scholarship and practice operate by facilitating space for diverse knowledges, ways of being, doing and relating. In this paper, considerations for nursing scholarship and practice, as well as recommendations to support the uptake of Two‐Eyed Seeing are explored. The authors assert that conceptual divisiveness, dichotomization and exclusion can be mitigated if nursing is informed by contextual knowledge, seeks to enact accountable partnerships with Indigenous knowledge holders, and holds the Mi'kmaq worldview upon which the concept developed in positive regard.

Funder

Canadian Nurses Foundation

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

University of British Columbia

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Nursing

Reference82 articles.

1. The conundrums of binary categories: Critical inquiry through the lens of postcolonial feminist humanism;Anderson J. M.;The Canadian Journal of Nursing Research,2004

2. Theory and practice: Beyond the dichotomy

3. Two-Eyed Seeing and other lessons learned within a co-learning journey of bringing together indigenous and mainstream knowledges and ways of knowing

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