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Communicating towards justice in ‘The Subaltern Voice’ (TSV)

Abstract
We write with a voice of the marginalised in mind, as both marginalised women scholars writing from a critical perspective on human organisation and as privileged human beings with concern for those more dangerously excluded from The Master’s House. The voice we raise does not plead for assimilation into circumstances as they are. It calls for radical change. Our ideas originate in research with Māori women accountants employed in organisations expressing commitment to Māori involvement. From that research we learned that aspiring to bicultural ways of being in a context prematurely deemed post-colonial is fraught with risks of co-option and unintentional collusion. Accordingly we are committed to further exposing neo-colonialism and to experiment with The Subaltern Voice (TSV) as a heuristic for this work. Asking what might be said in TSV that is different from what can be said in more commonly heard voices calling for inclusion has brought us to new thoughts about our own engagement with ‘The Empire’. Not only as it continues to colonise Māori locally and indigenous peoples globally, but from the myriad of places we take our positions to speak, sometimes ‘from the margins’ and other times from within the relative comforts of The Master’s House.
Type
Journal Article
Type of thesis
Series
Citation
Humphries, M. & McNicholas, P. (2009). Communicating towards justice in ‘The Subaltern Voice’ (TSV). Communication Journal of New Zealand, 10(2), 60-76.
Date
2009
Publisher
NZCA
Degree
Supervisors
Rights
This article has been published in the journal: Communication Journal of New Zealand. ©2009 New Zealand Communication Association. Used with permission.