TY - JOUR
T1 - Researching higher education in Africa as a process of meaning-making
T2 - Epistemological and theoretical considerations
AU - Cross, Michael
AU - Govender, Logan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Journal of Education (South Africa). All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/7/27
Y1 - 2021/7/27
N2 - In this article, we argue for a new way of thinking about knowledge construction in African higher education as a basis for developing new theoretical and epistemological insights, founded on inclusivity, epistemic freedom, and social justice. We recognise coloniality as a fundamental problem that needs us to scrutinise our knowledge of decolonisation (about decolonisation itself) and our knowledge for decolonisation (to make change possible). Following Bourdieu (1972), such thinking also requires degrees of vigilance that entail fundamental epistemological breaks, or put differently, it requires epistemological decolonisation as a point of departure. Thus, the future of tertiary education in Africa must be located within a new horizon of possibilities, informed by a nuanced political epistemology and ontology embedded in the complex African experience and visibility of the colonised and oppressed. In short, there can be no social justice without epistemic justice.
AB - In this article, we argue for a new way of thinking about knowledge construction in African higher education as a basis for developing new theoretical and epistemological insights, founded on inclusivity, epistemic freedom, and social justice. We recognise coloniality as a fundamental problem that needs us to scrutinise our knowledge of decolonisation (about decolonisation itself) and our knowledge for decolonisation (to make change possible). Following Bourdieu (1972), such thinking also requires degrees of vigilance that entail fundamental epistemological breaks, or put differently, it requires epistemological decolonisation as a point of departure. Thus, the future of tertiary education in Africa must be located within a new horizon of possibilities, informed by a nuanced political epistemology and ontology embedded in the complex African experience and visibility of the colonised and oppressed. In short, there can be no social justice without epistemic justice.
KW - African higher education
KW - Alternative thinking
KW - Epistemological decolonisation
KW - Social justice
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85113736302&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.17159/2520-9868/i83a01
DO - 10.17159/2520-9868/i83a01
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85113736302
SN - 0259-479X
SP - 13
EP - 33
JO - Journal of Education (South Africa)
JF - Journal of Education (South Africa)
IS - 83
ER -