Anscombe, Practice, and Indigenous Agency: Intention in Ngāi Tahu Letters, 1850-1950

Esercizi Filosofici 19 (2024):140-167 (2025)
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Abstract

In this paper we apply Anscombe’s account of human linguistic practices and of intentional action in a novel way—to the acts, by members of the Ngāi Tahu tribe in colonial-era Aotearoa New Zealand, of writing Letters to the Editor of local and regional newspapers. We identify the salient contexts of those acts and then draw on Anscombe’s work to identify intentional and moral actions that otherwise risk going unnoticed. Our analysis exemplifies Anscombe’s and Wittgenstein’s view that we can read off intentional action from behaviour in context and also yields a rich historical and conceptual account of the letter-writers. We argue that this approach has theoretical advantages for Indigenous and Postcolonial Studies.

Author Profiles

Emma Maurice
University of Canterbury
Diane Proudfoot
University of Canterbury

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