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Tautua: Service and Disability Activism in Samoa: D/C: Dis/color

Autor Juliann Anesi
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 11 dec 2026
The Sāmoan concept of tautua is the cultural practice of service—to family, village, church, and nation. For Juliann Anesi, tautua includes an ethical responsibility that extends to caring for people living with disabilities. Anesi learned this value from her aunty Sina, who was instrumental in founding two schools for youths in the mid-1970s—Aoga Fiamalamalama and Loto Taumafailike. These schools were designed for students like Sina’s son Gele, students excluded from private and public education because of intellectual or physical disabilities.
Tautua recounts how the Indigenous community organized and resisted ableist paradigms in colonial institutions by changing the education system to a more inclusive environment. Anesi explains how funding was arranged for the schools through NGOs. She also uses oral histories, personal narratives, archival documents, and newspapers to offer insights about how students experienced oppression and erasure as well as shame and sexism in their communities.
Highlighting advocacy and belonging, Tautua argues that these schools for students with disabilities centered Sāmoan concepts of service, advocacy, and self-determination in an attempt to decolonize elementary education. In doing so, Anesi shows what disability activism in Sāmoa can teach us about educability, school inclusion, and collective care.
 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781439925027
ISBN-10: 143992502X
Pagini: 232
Ilustrații: 5
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Editura: Temple University Press
Colecția Temple University Press
Seria D/C: Dis/color


Notă biografică

Juliann Anesi  is Assistant Professor of Gender Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. As a community educator and activist, she has worked with nonprofit organizations and schools in American Sāmoa, California, Hawai ́i, New York, and Sāmoa.