Abstract
The authors' respective experiences as Indigenous people, scholars, language activists, and Kwak'wala (KwakwaI+-kaI+-'wakw/Kwakiutl language) and a,Y=ia,Y=iA!kE:iiEata,Y=a (Hesquiaht dialect of the Nuu-chah-nulth/Nootka language) adult language learners and teachers are discussed in relation to the literature on spirituality and the supernatural. Using dialogic and autoethnographical voices, the authors highlight the long-term effects of metaphysical interaction on learning, as well as acknowledging its role in Indigenous research as a foundational and continuous part of Indigenous search for knowledge. Indigenous cultural principles and the narrative research practice of Indigenous scholars guide the authors in drawing on the traditions of teaching through story, centering relationships, and practicing reciprocity in the context of where Indigenous researchers stand in continual relationship to their Indigenous communities.
Topics
Native American and Alaska Native Children
English Learners
English Learners