| Literature DB >> 33732096 |
Angela R Fernandez1, Tessa Evans-Campbell2, Michelle Johnson-Jennings3, Ramona E Beltran4, Katie Schultz1, Sandra Stroud5, Karina L Walters2.
Abstract
Relationship to place is integral to Indigenous health. A qualitative, secondary phenomenological analysis of in-depth interviews with four non-Choctaw Indigenous women participating in an outdoor, experiential tribally-specific Choctaw health leadership study uncovered culturally grounded narratives using thematic analysis as an analytic approach. Results revealed that physically being in historical trauma sites of other Indigenous groups involved a multi-faceted process that facilitated embodied stress by connecting participants with their own historical and contemporary traumas. Participants also experienced embodied resilience through connectedness to place and collective resistance. Implications point to the role of place in developing collective resistance and resilience through culturally and methodologically innovative approaches.Entities:
Keywords: Indigenous, place; health; historical trauma; resilience
Year: 2020 PMID: 33732096 PMCID: PMC7958647 DOI: 10.1080/15313204.2020.1770652
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethn Cult Divers Soc Work ISSN: 1531-3204