印度的边缘纬度

L. Simon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期《印度的边缘化纬度》提出了新的研究,挑战了主流理论和信仰,这些理论和信仰支持并强化了限制社会和经济公平的态度。“自由主义者”一词在神学中被用来描述那些依靠理性来验证道德确定性而不是传统正统的教会人士。更广泛地说,纬度允许来自外部的想法、新的研究方法、包容性和被遗忘的声音。从这一期开始,J-Caste开始了我们第四年的非正统研究,我们的读者来自亚洲、欧洲、北美和其他地区。我们保持严格的同行评审过程,以及我们原有的开放获取政策,消除了所有出版、订阅、阅读、下载或转发文章的经济障碍。我们为出版有前途的年轻学者和知名学者而感到自豪。本期的主要文章《种姓身份与威胁结构:印度大学中的污名、偏见与社会代表》,开辟了新的领域,探讨了为什么印度的大学正在成为达利特和其他落后阶级(OBC)学生的社会失败场所。这篇文章主要基于作者收集的定性数据,认为大学里存在的种姓歧视和羞辱的基础与其他社会机构不一样。作者就学生如何发展应对策略以及高等教育如何治愈“受伤的(种姓)心理”提出了见解。本期杂志的另外两篇文章讨论了印度教育中的学习。排斥巴胡扬学童:对国家教育政策的反种姓批评2020年,印度探讨了教育不平等的本质,直接参考了种姓的社会再生产。“非种姓”大学:在印度班加罗尔的一所私立大学中审视包容性课程和达利特教学法的交叉点,在我们的论坛部分,解决了课程和教学法之间的脱节,这种脱节导致了“种姓话语的消除”,以及一些人之间深刻而悲剧性的异化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Latitudes of Marginality in India
This issue, Latitudes of Marginality in India, presents new research that challenge mainstream doctrines and beliefs that buttress and stiffen attitudes limiting social and economic equity. The term ‘latitudinarian’ was used in theology to describe churchmen who relied upon reason to verify moral certainty rather than the orthodoxy of tradition. Used more broadly, latitudes allow for ideas from outside, new approaches to research, inclusivity, and forgotten voices. With this issue, J-Caste embarks on our fourth year of heterodox research with readers across countries in Asia, Europe, North America and elsewhere. We maintain the rigor of our peer-review process as well as our original open-access policy which eliminates all financial barriers to publish, subscribe, read, download, or forward articles. We take pride in publishing promising young academics alongside celebrated and established scholars. The lead article in this issue, Caste Identities and Structures of Threats: Stigma, Prejudice, and Social Representation in Indian Universities, breaks new ground into why universities in India are turning into places of social defeat for Dalit and Other Backward Classes (OBC) students. Based largely on qualitative data gathered by the authors, the article argues that the basis of caste discrimination and humiliation in universities is not the same as it exists in other social institutions. The authors offer insights as to how students evolve strategies for coping and ideas for how higher education can heal “the wounded (caste) psyche.” Two other articles in the issue address learning in Indian education. The Exclusion of Bahujan Schoolchildren: An Anti-Caste Critique of the National Education Policy 2020, India explores the nature of educational inequality with direct reference to the social reproduction of caste. Un‘casting’ Universities: Examining the Intersections of Inclusive Curriculum and Dalit Pedagogies in a Private University in Bangalore, India, in our Forum section, addresses the disconnect between curriculum and pedagogy which results in the “erasure of the discourse on caste,” and a deep and tragic alienation among some.
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