打破白人作为高等教育:走向系统性的去殖民化

Christopher B. Knaus
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摘要

这篇创造性的概念性论文通过综合叙事、戏剧、歌词和诗歌作为非殖民化的方法,扩展了传统的学术方法。作者以第一人称叙述、非正式访谈、艺术表达和音乐融合为基础,阐明了非殖民战略中的紧张关系,包括超越种族代表,承认和应对种族化的贫困、种族主义融入高等教育的结构,以及对种族差异的全面否认。本文首先讨论了学生创作和制作的戏剧《The Fall》,它将#RhodesMustFall运动带到舞台上。结合学生对戏剧的讨论和反应,本文呼应了《堕落》的主题,表明中断殖民主义的策略虽然是必要的,但不足以改变正规教育的资本主义和剥削基础。以美国和南非作家为中心,本文强调教育的目的仍然是白人至上主义者的愿景,要摆脱这种反黑人的基础设施,转型必须与正在进行的、以学生为主导的非殖民化方法直接一致。文章随后将高等教育抗议活动与2010年南非世界杯艺术剥削的背景进行了对比,警告了挪用的力量,尤其是在全球舞台上。论文最后断言,必须培养创造性、艺术性和以黑人为中心的声音,并将其纳入非殖民化战略,以改变全球高等教育的白人化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Disrupting Whiteness as Higher Education: Towards a Systemic Decoloniality
This creative conceptual paper expands traditionalised academic approaches through integrated narratives, plays, lyrics, and poetry as decolonial method. Based in first person narratives, informal interviews, artistic expression, and music-integration, the author clarifies tensions in decolonial strategy, including moving beyond racial representation to acknowledge and respond to racialised poverty, racism built into the fabric of higher education, and an overarching denial of racial disparities. The paper begins with a discussion of the student-created and produced play, The Fall, which brings the #RhodesMustFall movement onto the stage. Integrating student discussions and reactions to the play, the paper echoes themes from The Fall, suggesting that strategies which interrupt coloniality, while necessary, are insufficient to transform from formal education’s capitalistic and exploitative foundation. In centring USA and South African writers, the paper highlights that the purpose of education remains a White supremacist vision and that to move from such anti-Black infrastructures, transformation must align directly with ongoing, student-led decolonial approaches. The paper then parallels higher education protests to the context of the 2010 World Cup’s artistic exploitation of South Africa, warning of the power of appropriation, especially on a global stage. The paper concludes with the affirmation that creative, artistic, and Black-centric voices must be fostered and integrated into decolonial strategies to transform the global Whiteness of higher education.
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