Storying Toward Pasin and Luksave: Permeable Relationships Between Papua New Guineans as Researchers and Participants

In Oceania, Papua New Guinea (PNG) appears large in the consciousness of exploring social life through the notion of sociality. Scholarship within the Melanesian region employs sociality to interrogate forms of social life and the different ways research methods account for the understanding of inte...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vincent Backhaus, Nalisa Neuendorf, Lokes Brooksbank
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-09-01
Series:International Journal of Qualitative Methods
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406920957182
id doaj-be7f620dc75e47bcab652f9c889f6d7d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-be7f620dc75e47bcab652f9c889f6d7d2020-11-25T01:55:10ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Qualitative Methods1609-40692020-09-011910.1177/1609406920957182Storying Toward Pasin and Luksave: Permeable Relationships Between Papua New Guineans as Researchers and ParticipantsVincent Backhaus0Nalisa Neuendorf1Lokes Brooksbank2 Indigenous Education and Research Centre, , Cairns, Australia Sexual and Reproductive Health Unit (SRHU), , Goroka, Papua New Guinea College of Arts Society and Education, , Douglas, Queensland, AustraliaIn Oceania, Papua New Guinea (PNG) appears large in the consciousness of exploring social life through the notion of sociality. Scholarship within the Melanesian region employs sociality to interrogate forms of social life and the different ways research methods account for the understanding of interactions between individuals and communities. Yet for the three PNG authors this assumed coherency between epistemes and method highlighted specific conceptual challenges for us as researchers and participants. We identified with two conceptual notions: “pasin” and “luksave” as distinct Austronesian language ideas derived from Tok Pisin—a creolisation of English utilized as a lingua franca throughout the country. We explored the development of pasin and luksave and the ways the conceptual claims served a dual function of developing a methodological and epistemic pathway toward an ethical assurance of meaningful relationality. We extend on current understanding in two ways. Firstly employing the methodology of story as critique of research assumptions and secondly, extend on the process of story work to suggest storying as a novel but relatable research methodology. Storying such research experiences as both method and epistemic accountability, guided our responsibility toward the relationships we hold to people, community and knowledge. Pasin and luksave embed an emancipatory and de-colonial intent through the guise of oral stories. These intentions in our scholarship fostered a form of coherent expressions of research claim and method assumption and also raised questions for us regarding what decolonizing Papua New Guinea ought to consider. Our paper also highlights a reformulation of the different ways research considers Oceania in particular Melanesia and the Papua New Guinean research context.https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406920957182
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vincent Backhaus
Nalisa Neuendorf
Lokes Brooksbank
spellingShingle Vincent Backhaus
Nalisa Neuendorf
Lokes Brooksbank
Storying Toward Pasin and Luksave: Permeable Relationships Between Papua New Guineans as Researchers and Participants
International Journal of Qualitative Methods
author_facet Vincent Backhaus
Nalisa Neuendorf
Lokes Brooksbank
author_sort Vincent Backhaus
title Storying Toward Pasin and Luksave: Permeable Relationships Between Papua New Guineans as Researchers and Participants
title_short Storying Toward Pasin and Luksave: Permeable Relationships Between Papua New Guineans as Researchers and Participants
title_full Storying Toward Pasin and Luksave: Permeable Relationships Between Papua New Guineans as Researchers and Participants
title_fullStr Storying Toward Pasin and Luksave: Permeable Relationships Between Papua New Guineans as Researchers and Participants
title_full_unstemmed Storying Toward Pasin and Luksave: Permeable Relationships Between Papua New Guineans as Researchers and Participants
title_sort storying toward pasin and luksave: permeable relationships between papua new guineans as researchers and participants
publisher SAGE Publishing
series International Journal of Qualitative Methods
issn 1609-4069
publishDate 2020-09-01
description In Oceania, Papua New Guinea (PNG) appears large in the consciousness of exploring social life through the notion of sociality. Scholarship within the Melanesian region employs sociality to interrogate forms of social life and the different ways research methods account for the understanding of interactions between individuals and communities. Yet for the three PNG authors this assumed coherency between epistemes and method highlighted specific conceptual challenges for us as researchers and participants. We identified with two conceptual notions: “pasin” and “luksave” as distinct Austronesian language ideas derived from Tok Pisin—a creolisation of English utilized as a lingua franca throughout the country. We explored the development of pasin and luksave and the ways the conceptual claims served a dual function of developing a methodological and epistemic pathway toward an ethical assurance of meaningful relationality. We extend on current understanding in two ways. Firstly employing the methodology of story as critique of research assumptions and secondly, extend on the process of story work to suggest storying as a novel but relatable research methodology. Storying such research experiences as both method and epistemic accountability, guided our responsibility toward the relationships we hold to people, community and knowledge. Pasin and luksave embed an emancipatory and de-colonial intent through the guise of oral stories. These intentions in our scholarship fostered a form of coherent expressions of research claim and method assumption and also raised questions for us regarding what decolonizing Papua New Guinea ought to consider. Our paper also highlights a reformulation of the different ways research considers Oceania in particular Melanesia and the Papua New Guinean research context.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406920957182
work_keys_str_mv AT vincentbackhaus storyingtowardpasinandluksavepermeablerelationshipsbetweenpapuanewguineansasresearchersandparticipants
AT nalisaneuendorf storyingtowardpasinandluksavepermeablerelationshipsbetweenpapuanewguineansasresearchersandparticipants
AT lokesbrooksbank storyingtowardpasinandluksavepermeablerelationshipsbetweenpapuanewguineansasresearchersandparticipants
_version_ 1724984646367707136