Vol. 2 No. 1: Mawachihitotaak: Métis Studies Conference Themed Issue
Notes from the Floor

måmawi-kiskinohamakosiwin: Coming to Understand Together

Lydia Toorenburgh
University of Victoria
A photo of a piece of beadwork on fish skin leather, laying on top of an open book with lined pages. The beadwork includes letters, lines, and a pine tree branch.

Published 2025-07-14

Keywords

  • expansive,
  • knowledge,
  • expert,
  • expertise,
  • scholar,
  • scholarship,
  • researcher,
  • research,
  • creation,
  • arts-based research,
  • nehiyawewin
  • ...More
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How to Cite

Toorenburgh, L. (2025). måmawi-kiskinohamakosiwin: Coming to Understand Together. Pawaatamihk: Journal of Métis Thinkers, 2(1), 1–13. https://doi.org/10.36939/pawaatamihk/vol2no1/art80

Abstract

Colonial definitions of scholar and scholarship are narrow, elitist, and hierarchical. The Mawachihitotaak Symposium organizers intentionally invited presenters and attendees from both within and outside of academia as equals and kin. Highlighting this inclusive approach, the author invites Métis people to think expansively about who a scholar is and what constitutes scholarship, reminding us of our cultural values and perspectives on knowledge and learning and leading us from exclusionary colonial definitions toward holism and community appreciation. Discussing several presentations and incorporating nehiyawewin (the Cree language), drawing, and poetics, this article offers lessons from the brilliant Metis thinking at Mawachihitotaak 2024.