Dear Dr. Parmjeet Parmar, You and I, both Indian origin migrants, migrated out of India in the 1990s. Both of us, in the STEM disciplines, completed our graduate degrees abroad after migration. You completed your Masters in Biochemistry in India, married, and moved to Aotearoa in 1995. I completed my Bachelors in Agricultural Engineering in India, took the GRE and moved to the U.S. to pursue a master's on a scholarship. You then completed your PhD from the University of Auckland in Neuroscience in 2003. I completed my PhD in Mass Communication from the University of Minnesota in 2001. Both of us eventually found ourselves in this unique land in Aotearoa, where Te Tiriti offers a powerful global register for how to organize a settler colonial/postcolonial society. Both of us probably had no awareness of Te Tiriti before migrating here. New Zealand to most Indians is mediatized through visuals of cricket games broadcast on TV screens, stories of E...
This blog offers Mohan Dutta's reflections on the theoretical framework of the culture-centered approach, examining the interplays among culture, communication and marginalisation. It also explores resistance, the ways in which communities at the margins challenge structures. Writings on the blog are updated to reflect the organic analysis of structure and agency. Occasionally, this serves as a space for interlocutors examining marginalisation and voice.