Chirere的《Tudikidiki》(2007)中的知识生态学:论非殖民化的本体论转向

Mbwera Shereck
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摘要

这篇文章试图将非殖民化的批判性思维引入非洲/津巴布韦文学传统。它探讨了记忆Chirere如何将短篇小说类型作为实际生活的一个领域,在这个领域中,解放知识生产的非殖民化实践关系得到了权衡。它认为,选集Tudikidiki(2007)作为Chirere的实践手工艺领域,唤起了对发展非殖民化选择至关重要的知识生态。从非殖民认识论的角度来看,文章认为殖民的持久历史持续阐明了非洲知识生产系统中不平等关系的存在。殖民主义以其多种表现形式毁容、扭曲、重塑并最终改变了非洲人的认知方式。其结果是知识灭绝,西方的知识体系被推崇为不可或缺和无懈可击的,而非洲土著形式的知识则被诋毁为冲突野蛮欲望和嘲笑的场所。在此背景下,本文认为在文学研究中,就非殖民化的细微差别而言,迫切需要参与本土理论和实践认识论项目。它坚持认为,非殖民化转向需要一个本体论变化的过程,这一过程说明了新生的知识生态的紧迫性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ecologies of Knowledge in Chirere’s Tudikidiki (2007): on Decolonial Ontological Turn
This article is an attempt to bring decolonial strands of critical thinking to African/Zimbabwean literary tradition. It explores how Memory Chirere uses the short story genre as a territory of practical life where decolonial practical relations of emancipatory knowledge production are weighed. It argues that the anthology, Tudikidiki, (2007) as Chirere's territory of artisanship of practices, evokes ecologies of knowledge crucial for developing decolonial options. From decolonial epistemic perspective, the article posits that the enduring historical duration of coloniality has elucidated the presence of unequal relations in African knowledge production systems. In its multiple manifestations, coloniality has disfigured, distorted, reconfigured and eventually transformed African ways of knowing. The result is epistemicide, in which Western epistemic systems are valorised as indispensable and unassailable, while indigenous forms of African knowing are vilified as setting a site for conflicting savage desires and derisions. Against this background, this paper considers the imperative need for engaging both indigenous theoretical and practical epistemological projects in terms of the nuances of decoloniality within literary studies. It insists that decolonial turn necessitates a process of ontological change that speaks to the emergency of nascent ecologies of knowledges.
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