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Teaching Africa [electronic resource] : Towards a Transgressive Pedagogy / by George J. Sefa Dei.

By: Sefa Dei, George J [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Explorations of Educational Purpose: 9Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2010Description: XXVII, 130p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781402057717.Subject(s): Philosophy (General) | Philosophy, modern | Education -- Philosophy | Philosophy | Non-Western Philosophy | Philosophy of EducationDDC classification: 181 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
History as Tool of Colonialism -- Teaching and Learning African History -- The Study of Africa and the African Experience: The Challenge and Possibilities of an Integrative Theory -- Theorizing Africa Beyond Its Boundaries -- Teaching Africa: “Development” and Decolonization -- Reclaiming “Development” Through Indigenity and Indigenous Knowledge -- Indigenous Knowledge! Any One? Pedagogical Possibilities for Anti-colonial Education -- Politicizing the Contemporary Learner: Implications for African Schooling and Education -- Looking to the Future – African-Centred Schooling in Action: Applying Development Discourse to Sustainability, Community Empowerment, and Health Awareness.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Written from the perspective of a knowledge base and educational practice that are both African-centred, this volume uses a discursive pedagogy that is anti-colonial in origin. It theorizes colonial – and re-colonial – relations and the implications of imperial structures on knowledge production and use; the understanding of indigenousness; and the pursuit of agency, resistance and subjective politics. Using a refined definition of colonial, less as ‘foreign’ or ‘alien’ but more ‘imposed and dominating’, the author shows us how colonialism is domesticated and how those who have been oppressed by dominant/hegemonic discourses may find it difficult to step out of them, let alone challenge or resist them. The book is a call for a critical interrogation of dominant knowledge about Africa in order to help the contemporary learner come to grips with the challenges and possibilities of knowing about the African world and the African human condition. The author’s anti-colonial discursive platform addresses distorted Eurocentric views of Africa, raises ontological and epistemological questions about teaching methods and methodologies relating to Africa, and highlights knowledge indigenous to Africa. At the same time, it shows what the rest of the world can learn from this knowledge.
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History as Tool of Colonialism -- Teaching and Learning African History -- The Study of Africa and the African Experience: The Challenge and Possibilities of an Integrative Theory -- Theorizing Africa Beyond Its Boundaries -- Teaching Africa: “Development” and Decolonization -- Reclaiming “Development” Through Indigenity and Indigenous Knowledge -- Indigenous Knowledge! Any One? Pedagogical Possibilities for Anti-colonial Education -- Politicizing the Contemporary Learner: Implications for African Schooling and Education -- Looking to the Future – African-Centred Schooling in Action: Applying Development Discourse to Sustainability, Community Empowerment, and Health Awareness.

Written from the perspective of a knowledge base and educational practice that are both African-centred, this volume uses a discursive pedagogy that is anti-colonial in origin. It theorizes colonial – and re-colonial – relations and the implications of imperial structures on knowledge production and use; the understanding of indigenousness; and the pursuit of agency, resistance and subjective politics. Using a refined definition of colonial, less as ‘foreign’ or ‘alien’ but more ‘imposed and dominating’, the author shows us how colonialism is domesticated and how those who have been oppressed by dominant/hegemonic discourses may find it difficult to step out of them, let alone challenge or resist them. The book is a call for a critical interrogation of dominant knowledge about Africa in order to help the contemporary learner come to grips with the challenges and possibilities of knowing about the African world and the African human condition. The author’s anti-colonial discursive platform addresses distorted Eurocentric views of Africa, raises ontological and epistemological questions about teaching methods and methodologies relating to Africa, and highlights knowledge indigenous to Africa. At the same time, it shows what the rest of the world can learn from this knowledge.

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