The Needle as Medium: Using Embroidery to Speak to Ghosts

Authors

  • Christine Rogers RMIT University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18432/ari29407

Keywords:

autoethnography, hauntology, embroidery, adoption, Māori

Abstract

As an adoptee, I am haunted by what Lifton (2009) calls the Ghost Kingdom, a place filled with the spectres of the ancestors I have been disconnected from. Derrida (1993), with his notion of hauntology, tells us that we must learn to speak to ghosts, and that by doing so we will learn to live. I am on a journey to speak to the ancestors of my birth father who were Ngāi Tahu (Māori), and through this, to make meaning in my present and future (Carsten, 2000). I am using embroidery as a medium to speak to, and with, my great-great-grandmother, Elizabeth (Fitzpatrick & Bell, 2016), working in a craft vernacular that would have been deeply familiar to her. This paper will discuss how the methodology of autoethnography, informed by adoption scholarship and feminist studies of craft, has led me to stitch work that engages with craft tradition, and speaks to loss, identity and belonging. 

Author Biography

Christine Rogers, RMIT University

Christine Rogers is a writer and filmmaker.  She has multiple screen credits in drama, documentary and digital stories. Her fiction and non-fiction writing has been published in anthologies, newspapers and blogs. She is currently undertaking a PhD at RMIT University, where she is the recipient of The Vice Chancellor’s Scholarship, an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship. See www.christine-rogers.com

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Published

2019-02-27

How to Cite

Rogers, C. (2019). The Needle as Medium: Using Embroidery to Speak to Ghosts. Art/Research/International:/A/Transdisciplinary/Journal, 4(1), 127–152. https://doi.org/10.18432/ari29407