Ghost Dances in Ivory Towers

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A01=Tina Bly
academic resistance movements
Author_Tina Bly
autoethnographic research
Category=GPS
Category=JHM
Choctaw knowledge systems
decolonising education
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Indigenous epistemologies
Indigenous higher education transformation
Indigenous Research
relational accountability
Research Methods

Product details

  • ISBN 9781041031239
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Oct 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Ghost Dances in Ivory Towers reflects an ethnographic journey shaped by ancestral strength, resilience, and reverence. It is not merely academic—it is ceremonial: a remembering, a return, and a song to generations yet to come.

This is a project of Indigenous empowerment and ancestral reclamation, offering a constellation of guiding principles rooted in Choctaw ways of knowing. Ghost Dances in Ivory Towers moves beyond critique; it becomes ceremony—disrupting colonial frameworks of academia and reimagining higher education as a place of relational accountability, healing, and reciprocity. By centering Indigenous voices, it challenges the foundations of institutional knowledge production and invites a return to wisdom that lives in land, lineage, and spirit. The title itself is both metaphor and invocation—a tribute to the Ghost Dance, a sacred act of resistance and cultural resurgence. Through story, scholarship, and spiritual insight, this work becomes a pathway—guiding policy, pedagogy, philosophy, and practice toward life-affirming futures.

Speaking across generations, this scholarly work is crafted for Indigenous families and future ancestors, for students and scholars, policymakers and poets, chiefs and community leaders. Grounded in autoethnographic and narrative methodologies, it offers a breathtaking journey—where Indigenous wisdom reshapes the academy, society, and the stories we choose to honor.

Tina Bly holds a Doctorate of Philosophy in Education Policy. Her greatest honor is being a mother and grandmother. She moves through the world as a researcher, counsellor, and author, centering Indigenous epistemologies and the healing power of story. Her practice is a living garden—rooted in ancestral memory, nourished by the expressive arts, and tended with a deep, quiet philosophy of care, creativity, and wisdom from the earth.

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