Book Details

Teaching Africa : Towards a Transgressive Pedagogy

Publication year: 2010

ISBN: 978-1-4020-5771-7

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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.


Subject: Humanities, Social Science and Law, Africa, African-Centred Epistemologies, Colonialism, Curriculum, Indigenity, Pedagogy, Teaching, anti-colonial, education, experience, knowledge, politics