OAR@UM Community:/library/oar/handle/123456789/193212025-12-26T12:48:07Z2025-12-26T12:48:07ZPostcolonial Directions in Education : volume 5 : issue 1/library/oar/handle/123456789/576712020-06-15T07:56:51Z2016-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Postcolonial Directions in Education : volume 5 : issue 1
Editors: Hickling Hudson, Anne; Mayo, Peter; Raykov, Milosh; Takayama, Keita; Heimans, Stephen; Amazan, Rose; Maniam, Vegneskumar
Abstract: Table of contents:
1/ TAKAYAMA, K., HEIMANS, S., AMAZAN, R., & MANIAM, V. - Editorial : Doing southern theory : towards alternative knowledges and knowledge practices in/for education --
2/ SIGAUKE, A. T. - Ubuntu/hunhu in post-colonial education policies in Southern Africa : a response to Connell's southern theory and the role of indigenous African knowledges in the social sciences --
3/ READER, P. - Knowing our place : decentring the metropole through place identity in the Lake Eyre Basin --
4/ GAMAGE, S. - A Buddhist approach to knowledge construction and education in Sri Lanka (Ceylon) in the context of colonisation and southern theory --
5/ MANIAM, V. - An Islamic voice for openness and human development in education : the relevance of Ibn Khaldun's ideas to Australian teacher education programs today --
6/ THOMAS, E. - Challenging understandings of adult learning with southern theory : recognizing everyday learning through a critical engagement with northern theories --
7/ FONZO, E. - Border/s --
8/ MAYO, P. - [Book review] Caitlin Janzen, Donna Jeffrey and Kristin Smith Eds. Unravelling encounters : ethics, knowledge and resistance under neoliberalism.2016-01-01T00:00:00ZThree Caribbean conferences in Jamaica and Haiti, 2016Hickling-Hudson, Anne/library/oar/handle/123456789/202532017-07-07T01:25:01Z2016-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Three Caribbean conferences in Jamaica and Haiti, 2016
Authors: Hickling-Hudson, Anne
Abstract: The Caribbean region regularly engenders and hosts intellectually stimulating educational and cultural events. In a visit this year to Jamaica, my country of origin, I experienced three of these events in June and July. It struck me that each had a richly postcolonial element of challenging negative legacies of colonialism, which have often solidified into current norms such as insufficiently tackling intellectual exclusion, neglecting material local problems, and downplaying or ignoring local achievement and culture. I reflect below on how the conferences contributed to countering such problems and establishing creative practices in intellectual culture.
Description: This article discusses the following conferences:
1. The Calabash Literary Festival, Jamaica: 3 -5 June 2016 -
2. The 41st Annual Conference of the Caribbean Studies Association (CSA), Haiti : 6-11 June 2016 -
3. Geography Anniversary Conference celebrating 50 years of the Geography Department at the University of the West Indies (UWI): 27 June – 1 July 20162016-01-01T00:00:00Z"The return of the excluded" feminist and postcolonial perspectives on western modernityGoedl, Doris/library/oar/handle/123456789/201272017-06-28T01:21:29Z2016-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: "The return of the excluded" feminist and postcolonial perspectives on western modernity
Authors: Goedl, Doris
Abstract: In political, scholarly and cultural discussions in the ‘Global North’, ideas of freedom, democracy and human rights were considered universal and legitimated for political and military interventions mostly in non-Western countries. Debates about the universality of the right to intervene are discussed in the frame of universality versus particularity. Whereas universalists defend their arguments in the name of modernity, their challengers opposed to these kinds of universal assumptions refer to the importance of particularism
and relativism; yet, both groups consider modernity as their main point of reference. To overcome this stalled discussion, I look at modernity through the deconstruction of epistemic dichotomies and hierarchies in order to open up a space for critical reflection on the concept itself. Contextualizing my reflections on modernity in the rich literature by scholars who challenge the dominant Western concept of modernity, I demonstrate that Western knowledge is not universal in an epistemic sense. Rather, it can be considered as a contentious concept with problematic assumptions about an epistemically
neutral subject, adopting a universalistic perspective while erasing the meaning of geopolitical location (Grosfoguel 2011). Arguing against this idea of an ‘assertive universality’, the metaphor of ’travelling theories,’ as proposed by Edward Said
and Clifford Geertz, helps to reflect upon the local, social and individual positioning of knowledge. The focus of this contribution is the utilisation of feminist and postcolonial perspectives to contribute to the deconstruction of modernity as a homogenous monolithic bloc. Considering the frame itself, I question the hidden, not explicated assumptions in the production of Western knowledge. Arguing that knowledge
production is not a question of geography but of epistemology, I deconstruct the modern project from the inside in order to overcome the epistemic dichotomy of modernity itself. The implications of this analysis for us as social scientists and researchers will be discussed at the end of the paper.2016-01-01T00:00:00ZModern global imaginaries, modern subjects, enduring hierarchical relations and other possibilitiesSusa, Rene/library/oar/handle/123456789/201262017-06-28T01:21:09Z2016-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Modern global imaginaries, modern subjects, enduring hierarchical relations and other possibilities
Authors: Susa, Rene
Abstract: This paper discusses selected dispositions and characteristics of the modern liberal/Cartesian subject observed in students’ responses to a survey on internationalization of higher education in Canada. The data on which this paper draws is part of a larger database of surveys, interviews, policy analyses and case studies that were developed within the framework of the Ethical Internationalization in Higher Education (EIHE) research project. The EIHE project was funded by the Finnish Academy of Science and was conducted between 2012-2016. This paper draws on three key findings from the responses of students (1451) of seven participating Canadian universities to present a broader (theoretical) context that could be inferred from what was observed in the data. For this purpose the paper first discusses some of the theories related to the existence and prevalence of the modern global imaginary that could be considered as a meta-framework under which such relations between the (modern) subject and his/her Other are normalized. In the next step it draws on psychoanalytical strands of decolonial and postcolonial critiques of the modern subject in an attempt to sketch some of problematic (and often unacknowledged) characteristics of the modern liberal/Cartesian subject that lead to constant re-production of binary hierarchical relations grounded on epistemic violence and privilege.2016-01-01T00:00:00Z