@inbook{d2fb563c2fcd4caab8d96c86bb714e50,
title = "Decolonial Feminist Solidarity/ies",
abstract = "In this chapter, we unpack why solidarity must not only be feminist but decolonial as well, and how this problematises the modern/colonial project of the university as a site of emancipation/progress. Embodying the methodology of the meeting-place, a trans-Indigenous praxis of cultivating embodied encounters in which research is ceremony, we centre our three differently positioned stories and dark wisdoms as a means to weave something in common that does not erase the plural and our plurality. Through our yearnings and/as meeting-places as an embodied and communal process of writing ourselves, we identify three key themes: the ethical and epistemological necessity of speaking from our placed knowing-being in the world; the (im)possibility of passing in Institutions of Whiteness; and the finding of our skins-in relation and our serpent{\textquoteright}s tongues. Together these offer gifts towards what it might mean to senti-pensar (think-feel) and embody a praxis of decolonising-feminist solidarity as kinship otherwise.",
keywords = "decolonial feminism, solidarity, meeting-place, writing differently, kinship otherwise",
author = "Ybiskay Gonz{\'a}lez and Sara Motta and Tiina Sepp{\"a}l{\"a}",
note = "{\textcopyright} The Editors and Contributors Severally 2023.",
year = "2023",
month = nov,
doi = "10.4337/9781800377035.00028",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-1-80037-702-8",
series = "Research Handbooks in Business and Management series",
publisher = "Edward Elgar",
pages = "297--314",
editor = "Saija Katila and Susan Meril{\"a}inen and Emma Bell",
booktitle = "Handbook of Feminist Research Methodologies in Management and Organization Studies",
address = "United Kingdom",
}