Non-Binary Trajectories as Epistemic Insurgency: On Decolonial Disobedience in Developmental Psychology

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.64074/hj36yg18

Keywords:

Cultural Psychology, Developmental Psychology, Decolonial Studies, Gender Dissidence

Abstract

Taking gender dissidence as a form of epistemic disobedience, this article engages critically with dominant paradigms in developmental psychology by interrogating the normative frameworks that regulate intelligibility, pathologised differences, and delimit what counts as “normal” development. Bridging the Cultural Psychology of semiotic dynamics and Decolonial Studies, it examines interview narratives of non-binary individuals, considering how they generate meaning in relation to themselves, alterities, and sociocultural realities. Meaning-making occurs through ambivalent processes that both negotiate with and disrupt modern-colonial logics embedded in psychological knowledge. Four self-defined non-binary adults (aged 26–30) living in Brasília, Brazil participated in this qualitative study, which employed semi-structured interviews, the go-along method, and a reflection group; each functioning as "dispositifs" for the co-construction of narratives. These materials were analysed in an integrated design encompassing all three moments. The analysis unfolds through four interwoven thematic axes: (1) resistance as a constitutive force in meaning-making; (2) the polyphonic character of non-binarity and its entanglements with racialisation; (3) dealing with classificatory regimes such as “gender dysphoria”; and (4) institutional violence in psychotherapy. Therefore, dissident ways of living emerge as a site of insurgent knowledge, destabilising binary logics and activating new ways of knowing, theorising, and existing within and beyond the discipline. By bringing to the centre embodied lives historically erased or pathologised by psychology, the article advocates for an epistemic reorientation grounded in political accountability, situated onto-epistemologies, and commitment to reimagining psychological science in response to the complexities of the present and plural forms of life.

Author Biographies

  • MSc Isabella Alves Alencar de Araujo, University of Brasília

    Psychologist, PhD candidate in the Psychology of Development and Education Program at the University of Brasília, Brazil (PGPDE/IP/UnB).

  • Dr. Maria Claudia Santos Lopes de Oliveira, University of Brasília

    Psychologist, PhD in Education, and Postdoctoral Fellow in Developmental Psychology. Permanent faculty member of the Post-Graduate Program in Human and Educational Developmental Psychology at the University of Brasília (PGPDE/IP/UnB), Brazil.

References

Bento, B. (2024). Abjeção: A construção histórica do racismo. Cult.

Carpiano, R. M. (2009). Come take a walk with me: The “Go-Along” interview as a novel method for studying the implications of place for health and well-being. Health & Place, 15(1), 263–272. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2008.05.003

Chaudhary, N., & Shukla, S. (2017). The third gender and their identity in Indian society. In N. Chaudhary, P. Hviid, G. Marsico, & J. W. Villadsen (Eds.), Resistance in everyday life: Constructing cultural experiences (pp. 35–48). Springer.

Henrich, J., Heine, S. J., & Norenzayan, A. (2010). The weirdest people in the world? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 33(2–3), 61–83. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X0999152X

Kusenbach, M. (2003). Street phenomenology: The go-along as ethnographic research tool. Ethnography, 4(3), 455–485. https://doi.org/10.1177/146613810343007

Lemos de Souza, L. (2025). Epistemes feministas e a Psicologia do Desenvolvimento: Percursos na pesquisa sobre gêneros, sexualidades e juventudes. Cultura Acadêmica.

Lopes de Oliveira, M. C. S. (2023). Como os seres humanos se desenvolvem? A perspectiva da psicologia cultural. In M. S. Neves-Pereira & A. U. Branco (Eds.), A psicologia cultural chega à escola. Desenvolvimento humano, cultura e educação (pp. 35–64). Information Age Publishing.

Marková, I., Linell, P., Grossen, M., & Salazar Orvig, A. (2007). Dialogue in focus groups: Exploring socially shared knowledge. Equinox Publishing.

Mignolo, W. D. (2009). Epistemic disobedience, independent thought and decolonial freedom. Theory, Culture & Society, 26(7–8), 159–181. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263276409349275

Orellana, C. I. (2016). El desafío de construir una psicología del desarrollo crítica en sociedades inhóspitas. Revista Costarricense de Psicología, 35(2), 4–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.22544/rcps.v35i02.01.

Overton, W. F. (2006). Developmental psychology: Philosophy, concepts, methodology. In R. M. Lerner (Ed.), Handbook of child psychology: Theoretical models of human development (pp. 107–188). Wiley.

Pavón-Cuéllar, D. (2021). Rumo a uma descolonização da psicologia latino-americana: Condição pós-colonial, virada decolonial e luta anticolonial. Brazilian Journal of Latin American Studies, 20(39), 95–127. https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.1676-6288.prolam.2021.182217

Valsiner, J. (2006). Developmental epistemology and implications for methodology. In R. M. Lerner (Ed.), Handbook of child psychology: Theoretical models of human development (pp. 166–209). Wiley.

Valsiner, J. (2014). An invitation to cultural psychology. Sage.

Downloads

Published

01-09-2025

How to Cite

Alves Alencar de Araujo, I., & Santos Lopes de Oliveira, M. C. (2025). Non-Binary Trajectories as Epistemic Insurgency: On Decolonial Disobedience in Developmental Psychology. JORMA International Journal of Health and Social Sciences, 3(5), 1-7. https://doi.org/10.64074/hj36yg18

Similar Articles

1-10 of 13

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.