Kitkińike
Kitkińike is a Nimiputímpt word which can be interpreted literally or symbolically. Kitkińike is commonly found in the phrases that orientate speakers towards what can be described in English as the cardinal directions. The root word kińike means ‘one of two choices’ and when paired with another suffix means ‘from’.1 The prefix ki means ‘by means of’.2 An example of the word together can be found in the word for west: tińéyne∙kitkińike leyle’∙k.3 This can be defined as ‘by means of the west’ or ‘from the direction of west’. In the context of this web project, kitkińike is being interpreted as a direction which can provide a means of both conceptually and formally orientating towards, and within, bibliographies as cultural landscapes. This is done by cutting through academic epistemologies and attuning expectations in new directions. The interest here is in the ways that bibliographic sources can be used to re-direct researchers across landscapes of Indigenous knowledges, so re-shaping approaches to research itself. 
Thinking with the gestural orientations of kitkińike allows us to nurture an appreciation of the transformative potential of bibliographic work as a dynamic and ongoing anticolonial practice. Rejecting the presumption that the so-called ‘secondary literature’ is of lesser significance than face-to-face knowledge creation ‘in the field’, this work offers a series of kitkińike as organising principles for those seeking to orientate towards social research with First Nations people, places, and communities.
In what follows I invite you to dwell with the four kitkińike that conceptually move an Indigenous bibliography towards new attunements. The aim is to identify and foreground the threads of connection, voice and anticolonial critique that arise from the materials themselves, rather than enacting a merely algorithmic re-shuffling of categories. My intention in this work is to insist that fieldwork begins in bibliographies. Understanding bibliographies as cultural landscapes means that they enable us to undertake a foundational form of fieldwork as we read, sort, and create our sources of information. This kitkińike does not replace fieldwork nor does it seek to create new hierarchies of epistemic importance. Rather, this kitkińike proposes a dynamic and intertextual approach to locating, assembling, and critically attending to constellations of Indigenous voice.
Attuning with the organising principles that I offer here, it becomes possible to curate an existing bibliography anew. This formation of bibliography as object orients attuners in four directions: kitkińike of self, kitkińike of care, kitkińike of community and kitkińike of reclamation.
Self
Kitkińike of self is key. This direction opens researchers to attunements of self through Indigenous epistemologies and voices. This kitkińike emerged from a recognition of foundational assumptions and limitations amongst social science colleagues regarding where Indigenous voices can be located. Research practices risk becoming an extension of colonial power relations when researchers presume field sites as the only site in which to encounter First Nations voices and perspectives. It could even be argued that researchers are practicing a form of ‘cultural mining’ when we see our traditional practices of participant observation as the primary vehicle through which knowledge is created. These approaches are very researcher centric. Moving in the direction of voice and self in a cultural landscape that already exists in writing rather than solely ‘in the field’ is a key in considering an anticolonial anthropology kitkińike.
Care
At its core kitkińike of care entails a kind of timeless thinking that preserves past traditions and looks to the future and continuation. It takes as its foundational orientation a response to ongoing processes of the colonial project and its many impacts across all aspects of Indigenous daily life. This includes addressing disparate health outcomes, speaking and researching in First Nations languages, growing and collecting native foods and caring for country. Kitkińike of care reorients that which is taken for granted and attunes researchers to new understandings of gender, family, and tradition. It is important to recognise that care comes in many forms and that includes cultivating spaces of Black joy. By showcasing and sharing joy (via social media, exhibitions, publications, etc) Black creatives are debunking stereotypes and shaking up expectations. This is another important form of care.
Kitkíńke of reclamation embraces decolonizing as a major theme and encompasses research into archives, museums, Indigenous sovereignty, Indigenous knowledges, mapping of landscapes, and Native Title. This kitkińike doesn’t just describe how to do Indigenous research, it demonstrates it as well with its approach to processes of editing and selecting contributors. Kitkíńike of reclamation is an acknowledgement of the ongoing colonial project with a focus on giving new form and revarious orms of sovereignty. Kitkíńke of reclamation manifests in textual form writing the kind of change that activists and change makers have been calling for in policy and community development for generations, but which governments have either ignored or failed to respond to. Kitkíńke of reclamation is the model for the futures First Nations peoples want and deserve. 
Reclamation
Community
In kitkińike of community, authors step away from solely personal stories and narratives and turn their focus to wider considerations of inclusivity and togetherness. Works explore themes of group representation but also the preservation of the uniqueness of the group identity. Contested histories are explored through giving voice to those lost in the archive and challenges to colonial representations enacted through acts of curation and education. Community also moves in the direction of collaborations—both within communities and across communities and cultures. Co-design and co-production are hallmarks of this dynamic space. In thinking about, with, and for community, Indigenous scholars engage and re-energize major debates in research and arts, creating new ways considering relationships, boundaries, and forms of inclusion. 
Kitkińike
Community
In kitkińike of community, authors step away from solely personal stories and narratives and turn their focus to wider considerations of inclusivity and togetherness. Works explore themes of group representation but also the preservation of the uniqueness of the group identity. Contested histories are explored through giving voice to those lost in the archive and challenges to colonial representations enacted through acts of curation and education. Community also moves in the direction of collaborations—both within communities and across communities and cultures. Co-design and co-production are hallmarks of this dynamic space. In thinking about, with, and for community, Indigenous scholars engage and re-energise major debates in research and arts, creating new ways considering relationships, boundaries, and forms of inclusion. 
Food Sovereignty
Food Sovereignty
How do cookbooks enact Indigenous food sovereignty?
Museum Studies
Museum Studies
Can a museum be a ceremony ground? 
Material culture
Material Culture
Why is an object always also a story?
Feminism
Feminism
What is First Nation feminism?
History
History
What histories demand telling, showing and sharing?
Education
Education
What is Indigenous education? And how do we reframe this question?
Anthropology
Anthropology
How is an Indigenous anthropology also community?
Indigenous Intellectual
Property
Indigenous Intellectual Property
How does Indigenous IP challenge science? 
Torres Straight Islander
Studies
Torres Straight Islander Studies
Which way? Ilan way.
Colonialism
Colonialism
Can naming colonialism transform its effects?
Ethnography
How is Indigenous ethnography regenerating the discipline? 
Ethnography
Bibliography
37
37. Green, Joyce (Ed.) (2007) Making Space for Indigenous Feminism. London: Zed Books.
Feminism
58
58. Lydon, Jane, Braithwaite, Sari, and Bostock-Smith, Shauna (2014) Photographing Indigenous people in New South Wales. In Lydon, Jane (Ed.) Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, pp. 55-75.
Material Culture
1
1. Aird, Michael (1993) Portraits of Our Elders. South Brisbane, Australia: Queensland Museum.
Material Culture
56
56. Langton, Marcia (2011) Anthropology, politics and the changing world of Aboriginal Australians, Anthropological Forum, 21(1), 1-22.
Anthropology
28
28. Crane Bear, Clifford and Zuyderhoudt, Lea M. (2010). A place for things to be alive: Best practice for cooperation that respects Indigenous Knowledge. In: Van Broekhoven, Laura, Buijs, Cunera, and Hovens, Pieter (Eds.) Sharing Knowledge and Cultural Heritage: First Nations of the Americas. Studies in Collaboration with Indigenous Peoples from Greenland, North and South America. Netherlands: Sidestone Press, pp. 133-139.
Material Culture, Museum Studies
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101. Whitinui, Paul, McIvor, Onowa, Robertson, Boni, Morcom, Lindsay, Cashman, Kimo, and Arbon, Veronica (2015) The World Indigenous Research Alliance (WIRA): Mediating and mobilizing Indigenous Peoples' educational knowledge and aspirations, Education Policy Analysis Archives, 23, 120.
Education
36
36. Gough, Julie (2018) Fugitive History: The Art of Julie Gough. Crawley: University of Western Australia Publishing.
Material Culture
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32. Ens, Emilie J., Pert, Petina L., Clarke, Philip A., Budden, Marita, Clubb, Lilian, Doran, Bruce, Douras, Cheryl, Gaikwad, Jitendra, Gott, Beth, Leonard, Sonia, Locke, John, Packer, Joanne, Turpin, Gerry, and Wason, Steve (2015) Indigenous biocultural knowledge in ecosystem science and management: Review and insight from Australia, Biological Conservation, 181, 133-149.
Indigenous Intellectual Property
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80. Rigney, Lester-Irabinna (2017) A design and evaluation framework for Indigenisation of Australian universities. In: Frawley, Jack, Larkin, Steve, and Smith, James A. (Eds.) Indigenous Pathways, Transitions and Participation in Higher Education. Springer: Singapore, pp. 45-63.
Education
7
7. Andrews, Jilda (2021) String ecologies: Indigenous country and pastoral empires. In: Sculthorpe, Gaye, Nugent, Maria, and Morphy, Howard (Eds.) Ancestors, Artefacts, Empire: Indigenous Australia in British and Irish Museums. London: British Museum Press, pp. 59-68.
MATERIAL CULTURE, MUSEUM STUDIES
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69. Nakata, Martin (2007) Disciplining the Savages, Savaging the Discipline. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press.
Education
5
5. Aird, Michael (2014), Aboriginal people and four early Brisbane photograhers. In: Jane Lydon (ed), Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies, Aboriginal Studies Press, Canberra: 133-156.
Material Culture
26
26. Cooper, Karen Coody (2008) Spirited Encounters: American Indians Protest Museum Policies and Practices. London: Altamira Press.
Museum Studies
52
52. Hutchings, Suzi (2019) Seven Indigenous anthropologists caught in the middle: The fragmentation of Indigenous knowledge in native title anthropology, law and policy in urban and rural Australia. In: Aída Hernández Castillo, Rosalva, Hutchings, Suzi, and Noble, Brian (Eds.) Transcontinental Dialogues: Activist Alliances with Indigenous Peoples of Canada, Mexico, and Australia. Phoenix: University of Arizona Press, pp. 193-219.
Anthropology
13
13. Arbon, Veronica (2008) Indigenous research: Aboriginal knowledge creation, Ngoonjook, 32, 80-94.
Education
55
55. Hayes-Gilpin, Kelley and Lomatewama, Ramson (2013) Curating communities at the Museum of Northern Arizona. In: Harrison, Rodney, Bryne, Sarah, and Clarke, Anne (Eds.) Reassembling the Collection: Ethnographic Museums and Indigenous Agency. Santa Fe: School for Advanced Research Press, pp. 259-283. 
MATERIAL CULTURE, MUSEUM STUDIES
90
90. Stolte, Gretchen M. (2014) Aboriginal exhibitions and aboriginal communities: Contemporary curation in Australia, International Journal of Cultural Creative Industries, 1(3), 52-62.
MUSEUM STUDIES
12
12. Arbon, Veronica (2008) Arlathirnda Ngurkarnda Ityirnda: Being-knowing-doing: De-colonising Indigenous Tertiary Education. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Education
78
78. Rigney, Lester-Irabinna (2001) A first perspective of Indigenous Australian participation in science: Framing Indigenous research towards Indigenous Australian intellectual sovereignty, Kaurna Higher Education Journal, 7, 1-13.
Indigenous Intellectual Property
57
57. Lonetree, Amy (2012) Decolonizing Museums: Representing Native America in National and Tribal Museums. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 
Museum Studies
38
38. Greeno, Lola and Gough, Julie (2014) Lola Greeno: Cultural Jewels. Surry Hills: Australian Design Centre.
Material Culture
91
91. Stolte, Gretchen M. (2020) The legacy of Queensland Aboriginal creations and contemporary artefact production, Aboriginal History Journal, 44, 117-142.
MATERIAL CULTURE, MUSEUM STUDIES
75
75. Oxenham, Donna (2014) Photographing Aboriginal Australians in West Australia. In: Lydon, Jane (Ed.) Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, pp. 207-232.
Material Culture
68
68. Morrison, Anne, Rigney, Lester-Irabinna, Hattam, Robert, and Diplock, Abigail (2019) Toward an Australian Culturally Responsive Pedagogy: A Narrative Review of the Literature. Adelaide: University of South Australia.
Education
10
10. Arbon, Veronica (2006) Thirnda ngurkarnda ityrnda: Ontologies in Indigenous tertiary education. Phd thesis, Deakin University, viewed 27 October 2023, Deakin University Library.
Education
8
8. Andrews, Jilda (2021) Traditional ecological knowledges in textile designs of Northern Australia. In: Barrkman, Joanna (Ed.) Aboriginal Screen-Printed Textiles from Australia's Top End. Seattle: University of Washington Press, pp. 201-210.
MATERIAL CULTURE, MUSEUM STUDIES
35
35. Gough, Julie  (2014) Forgotten lives – the first photographs of Tasmanian Aboriginal people. In: Lydon, Jane (Ed.) Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, pp. 21-54.
Material Culture
4
4. Aird, Michael (2002). Developments in the repatriation of human remains and other cultural items in Queensland, Australia. In: The dead and their possessions: repatriation in principle, policy and practice, edited by Cressida Fforde, Jane Hubert and Paul Turnbull. New York, NY, United States: Routledge/Taylor & Francis: 303-311.
Museum Studies
88
88. Simpson, Audra  (2014) Mohawk interruptus. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Ethnography
79
79. Rigney, Lester-Irabinna  (2002) Indigenous education and treaty: Building Indigenous management capacity, Balayi: Culture, Law and Colonialism, 4, 73-82.
Education
15
15. Baymarrwangaa, Laurie  James, Bentley, and Lydon, Jane (2014) The ‘Myalls’ ultimatum: Photography and Yolngu in Eastern Arnhem Land. In: Lydon, Jane (Ed.) Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, pp. 254-272.
Material Culture
100
100. Watson, Irene (2016) First Nations and the colonial project, International Law and Peoples’ Resistance, 1(1), 30-39.
Colonialism
11
11. Arbon, Veronica (2007) Knowing from where? Journal of Australian Indigenous Issues, 10(2), 26-34.
Education
59
59. Lyons, Ilisapeci, Hill, Rorsemary, Deshong, Samarla, Mooney, Gary, Turpin, Gerry (2019) Putting uncertainty under the cultural lens of traditional owners from the Great Barrier Reef Catchments, Regional Environmental Change, 19,  1597-1610.
Indigenous Intellectual Property
67
67. Moreton-Robinson, Aileen  (2021) Talkin' Up to the White Woman: Indigenous Women and Feminism. Minneapolis MN: University of Minnesota Press.
Feminism
44
44. Hughes, Karen and Trevorrow, Aunty Ellen (2014) It’s that reflection: Photograph was recuperative practice, a Ngarrindjeri perspective. In: Lydon, Jane (Ed.) Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, pp. 175-206.
Material Culture
103
103. Lyons, Nathan (2021). Kooking with a Koori: budget-friendly recipes. Sydney: Simon and Schuster.
Food Sovereignty
83
83. Riphagen, Marianne and Stolte, Gretchen M. (2016) The functioning of Aboriginal cultural protocols in Australia’s contemporary art world, International Journal of Cultural Property, 23(3), 295-320.
Material Culture
3
3. Aird, Michael (2001) Brisbane Blacks. Southport, QLD, Australia: Keeaira Press.
Ethnography, history
92
92. Stolte, Gretchen M. (2020) Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art: An Anthropology of Identity Production in Far North Queensland. London: Routledge.
Ethnography, Material Culture,
Torres Straight Islander Studies
14
14. Bamblett, Lawrence (2014) Picture who we are: Representations of identity and the appropriation of photographs into a Wiradjuri oral history tradition. In Lydon, Jane (Ed.) Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies, Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, pp. 76-102.
Material Culture
30
30. Diamond, Jo (2016) Writing home on the Pari and touring Pacific Studies. In: Alexeyeff, Kalissa and Taylor, John (Eds.) Touring Pacific Cultures. Canberra: Australian National University Press, pp. 227-244.
Material Culture
20
20. Cameron, Patsy (2016) Grease and Ochre: the Blending of Two Cultures at the Colonial Sea Frontier. Hobart: Fullers Bookshop.
History
85
85. Sanders, Nina (2020) Apsáalooke Women and Warriors. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Material Culture, Museum Studies
87
87. Sculthorpe, Gaye (2021) Exile and punishment in Van Diemen’s Land. In: Sculthorpe, Gaye, Nuget, Maria, and Morphy, Howard (Eds.) Ancestors, Artefacts, Empire: Indigenous Australia in British and Irish Museums. London: British Museum Press, pp. 144-152.
MATERIAL CULTURE, MUSEUM STUDIES
94
94. Stolte, Gretchen M., Flinders, Lynelle, Creed, Cheryl, and Tommy Pau, Robert (2015) An Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander approach to intellectual property: Industry insight into the development of Indigenous cultural protocols, International Journal of Cultural and Creative Industries, 2(3), 64-75.
Material Culture, Torres Straight Islander Studies