《我梦见一座岛》:黑人的欢乐、讲故事和拒绝的艺术。高等教育中的创造性方法和非殖民化实践。

IF 2.2 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
Frontiers in Sociology Pub Date : 2025-07-25 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fsoc.2025.1537033
Naomi Alormele
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文通过将情感叙事、创造性方法论和黑人快乐定位为认知抵抗和制度批判的变革工具,提出了非殖民化和黑人女权主义对高等教育研究的干预。该研究以英国和加拿大黑人女性在学术和专业领域的声音为中心,借鉴了非殖民化理论、黑人女权主义思想和批判种族理论,研究了贡献者如何应对系统性排斥、种族化的情绪劳动和表演多样性的局限性。本研究采用跨语境、贡献者主导的方法——包括讲故事的对话、反思性期刊、诗歌和视觉人工制品——将情感和创造性的表达形式确立为知识生产的合法和重要模式。黑色快乐不是一种情感状态,而是一种激进的方法论和政治框架:通过幽默、仪式和关怀来实现,它成为一种生存、拒绝和重新想象的策略。讲故事既是一种方法,也是一种实践,为贡献者提供了表达生活现实和主张认知代理的空间。视觉艺术品——如拼贴画、隐喻画和插图诗歌——被分析为反叙事,破坏了抹杀,重塑了黑人女性在学术机构中的存在。当英国的作者面对帝国的残余和基于阶级的排斥时,加拿大的作者面临着多元文化主义和反土著种族主义的矛盾。在这两种情况下,该研究揭示了象征性包容如何掩盖结构性伤害。这项研究通过展示以情感为基础、以艺术为基础的方法在揭示隐藏形式的知识和抵抗方面的力量,为当前关于非殖民化研究的辩论做出了贡献。它呼吁机构超越修辞上的平等,尊重黑人女性的智力劳动,将快乐作为方法,并支持创造性的、相互关联的方法来实现高等教育的转型。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

"I dream of an island": Black joy, storytelling and the art of refusal. Creative methodologies and decolonial praxis in higher education.

"I dream of an island": Black joy, storytelling and the art of refusal. Creative methodologies and decolonial praxis in higher education.

"I dream of an island": Black joy, storytelling and the art of refusal. Creative methodologies and decolonial praxis in higher education.

"I dream of an island": Black joy, storytelling and the art of refusal. Creative methodologies and decolonial praxis in higher education.

This paper advances a decolonial and Black feminist intervention into higher education research by positioning emotive storytelling, creative methodologies, and Black joy as transformative tools for epistemic resistance and institutional critique. Centring the voices of Black women in academic and professional roles across the UK and Canada, the study draws on Decolonial Theory, Black Feminist Thought, and Critical Race Theory to examine how contributors navigate systemic exclusion, racialised emotional labour, and the limitations of performative diversity. Using a cross-contextual, contributor-led approach-including storytelling conversations, reflective journals, poetry, and visual artefacts-this research establishes emotive and creative forms of expression as legitimate and vital modes of knowledge production. Black joy is conceptualised not as an affective state, but as a radical methodological and political framework: enacted through humour, ritual, and care, it becomes a strategy of survival, refusal, and reimagining. Storytelling functions as both method and praxis, offering contributors space to articulate lived realities and assert epistemic agency. Visual artefacts-such as collages, metaphorical drawings, and illustrated poetry-are analysed as counter-narratives that disrupt erasure and reframe Black women's presence within academic institutions. While UK contributors contend with the afterlives of empire and class-based exclusion, Canadian contributors confront the contradictions of multiculturalism and anti-Indigenous racism. Across both contexts, the study exposes how symbolic inclusion masks structural harm. This study contributes to current debates on decolonising research by demonstrating the power of emotionally grounded, arts-based methodologies to surface hidden forms of knowledge and resistance. It calls for institutions to move beyond rhetorical equity by honouring Black women's intellectual labour, embedding joy as method, and supporting creative, relational approaches to transformation in higher education.

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来源期刊
Frontiers in Sociology
Frontiers in Sociology Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
4.00%
发文量
198
审稿时长
14 weeks
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