A. Marshall’s research while affiliated with Cape Breton University and other places

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Publications (2)


Figure 1. Muin and the Seven Hunters. 
Mi'kmaq Night Sky Stories; Patterns of Interconnectiveness, Vitality and Nourishment
  • Article
  • Full-text available

October 2010

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1,266 Reads

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2 Citations

P. Harris

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M. Marshall

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A. Marshall

This article shares some of the experiences of an integrative science team based at Cape Breton University, Canada. Integrative science is defined as "bringing together Indigenous and Western scientific knowledge and ways of knowing" and the team includes Mi'kmaq Elders and educators, Cheryl Bartlett and her Research Associates. Together we worked to rekindle the Mi'kmaq Sky Story, Muin and the Seven Hunters, to produce a DVD of the story as well as a children's book, and then to share it with people throughout Canada and the world. We offer insights into the manner in which night sky stories engender interconnectiveness and interdependability through their cultural, scientific and ecological teachings and so help to revitalise the culture and the individual by feeding all aspects of the human experience (spiritual, emotional, physical and cognitional). We explore the concept of storywork, with emphasis on the relationship between storyteller and listener as a story is told, as well as considering the multi-layered aspect of Indigenous stories.

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Citations (2)


... The need to recognise the limitations and benefits of radically different approaches to knowledge has been described as Etuaptmumk/two-eyed seeing by First Nations elders Murdena and Albert Marshall in Canada (Iwama et al., 2009). This view accords with an Foluke: Note -After the end of the world I read an article about new forms of grief arriving in therapy rooms -grief that is not connected to an individual loss but a sense that the earth is doomed. ...

Reference:

Decolonising the aftermath of death in UK contexts: theoretical approaches, institutional ‘constraints’, and everyday experiences
Two-eyed seeing and the language of healing in community-based research
  • Citing Article
  • January 2009

... Stories are grounded in very specific local knowledge of a region's natural history, coupled with complex layers of family and personal experiences and a deep connection to the past, and therefore to Indigenous identity [142]. Innovative storytelling projects can thus help to "engender interconnectiveness and interdependability through their cultural, scientific and ecological teachings" [143] (p. 14). ...

Mi'kmaq Night Sky Stories; Patterns of Interconnectiveness, Vitality and Nourishment