教授达利特人的乌托邦:课堂笔记

N. Sukumar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在印度,知识的生产是在种姓、阶级、种族和性别结构的封闭领域内进行的。这使得人们能够毫不掩饰地兜售美化过去的一维认识论,为普遍存在的社会等级制度辩护,并为现有的社会秩序制造共识。人们定期询问现状,由此产生的辩论被隐藏在历史的书页里。很少,如果有的话,这些争论成为教育学的一部分,从而点燃了对更解放的社会机构的追求。这并不奇怪,因为象征性权力的再现需要严密保护。古代世界认为土地是最重要的资源,为了夺取更多的领土而发动战争。对于工业化社会来说,资本是维持生计的源泉,但在现代,基于知识的特权和权力是神奇的咒语,是社会经济关系的货币。这篇文章围绕着研究者试图在德里大学的硕士阶段引入一门关于达利特·巴胡詹政治思想的完整课程展开。这种干预遭到了来自特权种姓的根深蒂固的学术界的反对,他们希望延续他们的婆罗门主义世界观。该课程规定的课本/阅读材料已被上级当局要求禁止。那些主张印度版本的解放神学的思想家们从来没有在意识形态层面上参与过。与参加课程的学生的日常接触以及他们在课堂上的互动提供了对谈判乌托邦的多层次理解。这篇文章是基于与各种利益相关者的讨论,学术委员会决定了教学方法,学生的反馈和课堂参与超过五年。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Teaching Dalit Bahujan Utopias: Notes from the Classroom
The production of knowledge in India operates within a rarefied domain enclosed within the structures of caste, class, ethnicity and gender. This has enabled the unabashed peddling of one-dimensional epistemology of glorifying the past, justifying the prevalent social hierarchies and manufacturing consent for the existing social order. Periodically, the status quo was interrogated and the resultant debates are secreted within the pages of history. Rarely if ever, these contestations become a part of the pedagogy thereby igniting a quest for a more emancipatory social apparatus. This is not surprising as the reproduction of the symbolic power needs to be closely guarded. The ancient world considered land as the paramount resource and wars were waged to capture more territories. For the industrialized societies, capital was the source of sustenance but in the modern era, privilege and power based on knowledge is the magic mantra, the currency of socio-economic relations. This article revolves around the attempts made by the researcher to introduce a full-fledged course on Dalit Bahujan Political Thought1 at the Masters level in Delhi University. This intervention was opposed by the entrenched academia hailing from the privileged castes who wished to perpetuate their Brahmanicalweltanschaung. The texts/readings prescribed for the course were sought to be banned by the higher authorities. The pantheon of thinkers who advocated an Indian version of liberation theology was never engaged with at an ideological level. The everyday engagements with the students who joined the course and their interactions in the classrooms provide a multi-layered understanding of negotiating utopias. This article is based on discussions with various stakeholders—academic committees who decide on pedagogy, feedback from students and classroom engagements for more than five years.
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