"A Community of People Worthy of the Name Community": The Engagement Practices, Wellness, and Self-Identity of Anishinaabe Young Women and Young Two-Spirit People of Eabametoong First Nation
This thesis explores the relationship between engagement, well-being, and self-identity for Anishinaabe young women and young two-spirit people living in Eabametoong First Nation (EFN). Guided by Community-Based Participatory Research and Indigenous Research Methodologies, I collaborated with contri...
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Other Authors: | , |
Format: | Thesis |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of Guelph
2020
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Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10214/21324 |
_version_ | 1821505076910358528 |
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author | Kirton, Samantha |
author2 | McIlwraith, Thomas Levac, Leah |
author_facet | Kirton, Samantha |
author_sort | Kirton, Samantha |
collection | University of Guelph: DSpace digital archive |
description | This thesis explores the relationship between engagement, well-being, and self-identity for Anishinaabe young women and young two-spirit people living in Eabametoong First Nation (EFN). Guided by Community-Based Participatory Research and Indigenous Research Methodologies, I collaborated with contributors from EFN to understand the way engagement, well-being, and self-identity are interconnected. The contributors with whom I spoke contribute to the well-being of their community, and their engagement strengthens their self-identities and becomes a part of their well-being practices. Based on my analysis of interview, participant observation, and photovoice data, I argue that the contributors’ engagement activities are equally as important for maintaining well-being and strengthening self-identity, as well-being and self-identity are for inspiring engagement. Additionally, although contributors do not always see themselves as leaders, all of those with whom I spoke are using their skills and knowledge to serve their community in a way that is characteristic of Indigenous leadership practices. |
format | Thesis |
genre | anishina* |
genre_facet | anishina* |
id | ftunivguelph:oai:atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca:10214/21324 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
op_collection_id | ftunivguelph |
op_relation | https://hdl.handle.net/10214/21324 |
op_rights | Attribution 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | University of Guelph |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftunivguelph:oai:atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca:10214/21324 2025-01-16T18:59:12+00:00 "A Community of People Worthy of the Name Community": The Engagement Practices, Wellness, and Self-Identity of Anishinaabe Young Women and Young Two-Spirit People of Eabametoong First Nation Kirton, Samantha McIlwraith, Thomas Levac, Leah 2020-08-21 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10214/21324 en eng University of Guelph https://hdl.handle.net/10214/21324 Attribution 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Anishinaabe young women two-spirit engagement well-being wellness self-identity community political Thesis 2020 ftunivguelph 2024-08-20T23:47:41Z This thesis explores the relationship between engagement, well-being, and self-identity for Anishinaabe young women and young two-spirit people living in Eabametoong First Nation (EFN). Guided by Community-Based Participatory Research and Indigenous Research Methodologies, I collaborated with contributors from EFN to understand the way engagement, well-being, and self-identity are interconnected. The contributors with whom I spoke contribute to the well-being of their community, and their engagement strengthens their self-identities and becomes a part of their well-being practices. Based on my analysis of interview, participant observation, and photovoice data, I argue that the contributors’ engagement activities are equally as important for maintaining well-being and strengthening self-identity, as well-being and self-identity are for inspiring engagement. Additionally, although contributors do not always see themselves as leaders, all of those with whom I spoke are using their skills and knowledge to serve their community in a way that is characteristic of Indigenous leadership practices. Thesis anishina* University of Guelph: DSpace digital archive |
spellingShingle | Anishinaabe young women two-spirit engagement well-being wellness self-identity community political Kirton, Samantha "A Community of People Worthy of the Name Community": The Engagement Practices, Wellness, and Self-Identity of Anishinaabe Young Women and Young Two-Spirit People of Eabametoong First Nation |
title | "A Community of People Worthy of the Name Community": The Engagement Practices, Wellness, and Self-Identity of Anishinaabe Young Women and Young Two-Spirit People of Eabametoong First Nation |
title_full | "A Community of People Worthy of the Name Community": The Engagement Practices, Wellness, and Self-Identity of Anishinaabe Young Women and Young Two-Spirit People of Eabametoong First Nation |
title_fullStr | "A Community of People Worthy of the Name Community": The Engagement Practices, Wellness, and Self-Identity of Anishinaabe Young Women and Young Two-Spirit People of Eabametoong First Nation |
title_full_unstemmed | "A Community of People Worthy of the Name Community": The Engagement Practices, Wellness, and Self-Identity of Anishinaabe Young Women and Young Two-Spirit People of Eabametoong First Nation |
title_short | "A Community of People Worthy of the Name Community": The Engagement Practices, Wellness, and Self-Identity of Anishinaabe Young Women and Young Two-Spirit People of Eabametoong First Nation |
title_sort | "a community of people worthy of the name community": the engagement practices, wellness, and self-identity of anishinaabe young women and young two-spirit people of eabametoong first nation |
topic | Anishinaabe young women two-spirit engagement well-being wellness self-identity community political |
topic_facet | Anishinaabe young women two-spirit engagement well-being wellness self-identity community political |
url | https://hdl.handle.net/10214/21324 |