What the Frightened Man Saw A fieldwork conversation, a photograph from a marae, and what a minority learns to read in the symbols a state agrees to stand beside. He was afraid before he had said anything worth being afraid of. We had been talking for a long time — the kind of fieldwork conversation that circles its subject for an hour before it lands — when he told me, a Muslim man of Indian origin, that the ideology he thought he had left behind had followed him here, to Aotearoa, and that it had begun to seep into the very institutions meant to keep him safe. I asked him what made him think so. He went quiet, and the temperature of the room changed. Evidence, for a man in his position, is not a neutral thing to hand across a table. To name what you have seen is to make yourself visible to it. After a while he reached not for a document but for a picture — a photograph taken on a marae, stored on his phone — and slid it toward me. Look , he said. Look who is standing there. I w...
The Margins Review · Culture-Centered Approach
The culture-centred blog of Mohan J. Dutta — Massey University, Aotearoa. Home of The Margins Review: critical intellectual opinions from Aotearoa to the world.