Decoloniality, Spanish and Latin American studies in Australian universities: ¿es un mundo ch’ixi posible?

Danielle H. Heinrichs
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

ABSTRACT Course descriptions from Spanish and Latin American studies departments in Australian universities operate as both curriculum documents and promotional materials. As a result, these departments face difficulties in promoting the ideals of social justice and equity often associated with language education. This paper analyses these course descriptions for examples of themes that visibilise other ways of knowing/doing/being from a decolonial perspective in response to the neoliberal ethic inherent to the genre. Using a critical discourse analytic approach from a Latin American perspective, this paper analyses several key themes of decoloniality present in the course descriptions including historical acceptance, language diversity, and gender and sexuality. These themes offer examples of how Spanish and Latin American studies departments in Australia are disrupting dominant ethics, ontologies and epistemologies within institutional constraints to work towards un mundo ch’ixi: a world of contentious but complementary opposites.
澳大利亚大学的非殖民化、西班牙语和拉丁美洲研究:是否有可能?
澳大利亚大学西班牙语和拉丁美洲研究系的课程描述既是课程文件,也是宣传材料。因此,这些部门在促进往往与语言教育有关的社会正义和公平理想方面面临困难。本文分析了这些课程描述的例子,这些主题从非殖民化的角度看到了认识/做/存在的其他方式,以回应该类型固有的新自由主义伦理。从拉丁美洲的角度出发,运用批判性话语分析方法,本文分析了课程描述中出现的几个关键主题,包括历史接受、语言多样性、性别和性。这些主题提供了一些例子,说明澳大利亚的西班牙和拉丁美洲研究部门是如何在制度约束下打破主导的伦理、本体论和认识论,朝着“unmundo chixi”的方向努力的:一个充满争议但互补的对立面的世界。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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