Ong argues that writing can “enrich the human psyche, enlarge the human spirit, intensify its interior life.” [1] In other words writing can be moulded to fit those who use it, and can extend rather than diminish subjectivity and intersubjectivity. Max Van Manen describes the power of writing:
Writing fixes thoughts on paper. It externalises what in some senses is internal; it distances us from our immediate lived involvements with the things of our world. As we stare at the paper, and stare at what we have written, our objectified thinking now stares back at us. This writing creates the reflective cognitive stance …[2]
Writing has a paradoxical power that comes from its ability to objectify as ideas are placed onto paper, yet as it objectifies it subjectifies. It can do this because writing can represent a dialogue with the self. Even though many Indigenous women write in…
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