{"title":"Decolonising education: critical reflections from India","authors":"Mousumi Mukherjee","doi":"10.17561/ae.vextra1.7345","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Educational development within the postcolonial Indian Nation-state is integrally connected with the colonial history. Much like other postcolonial nations, modernisation of Indian society through education is a product of the “local history” and the “global design” of colonialism and contemporary processes of globalisation. The modern colonial imaginary has been predominant in shaping the “subject lessons” learnt by modern Indian elites. Though there were missionaries, some benevolent Europeans, and native intellectuals committed to the cause of education for the uplift of the Indian masses, the British Raj mostly promoted the education for the elites. This modern colonial imaginary also shaped Indian nationalism and the nationalist freedom movement led by the elites of the Indian society. Within a diverse class, caste, multi-ethnic and religious context, often this nationalist imaginary led to the suppression of subaltern voices. The establishment of the Modern Indian nation-state with a democratic constitution drafted by a constituent assembly with representation from all sections of the diverse Indian society (including 15 women from diverse backgrounds) and chaired by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, a dalit[i] scholar and intellectual, promised the establishment of democracy and social justice. However, this paper argues that the constitutional promise cannot be fulfilled without decolonising the aims and objectives of education that serves the interest of specific elite groups. In order to decolonise education, it would be of utmost importance to align the aims and objectives of education with that of democratic education. ","PeriodicalId":41295,"journal":{"name":"Aula de Encuentro","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Aula de Encuentro","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.17561/ae.vextra1.7345","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Educational development within the postcolonial Indian Nation-state is integrally connected with the colonial history. Much like other postcolonial nations, modernisation of Indian society through education is a product of the “local history” and the “global design” of colonialism and contemporary processes of globalisation. The modern colonial imaginary has been predominant in shaping the “subject lessons” learnt by modern Indian elites. Though there were missionaries, some benevolent Europeans, and native intellectuals committed to the cause of education for the uplift of the Indian masses, the British Raj mostly promoted the education for the elites. This modern colonial imaginary also shaped Indian nationalism and the nationalist freedom movement led by the elites of the Indian society. Within a diverse class, caste, multi-ethnic and religious context, often this nationalist imaginary led to the suppression of subaltern voices. The establishment of the Modern Indian nation-state with a democratic constitution drafted by a constituent assembly with representation from all sections of the diverse Indian society (including 15 women from diverse backgrounds) and chaired by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, a dalit[i] scholar and intellectual, promised the establishment of democracy and social justice. However, this paper argues that the constitutional promise cannot be fulfilled without decolonising the aims and objectives of education that serves the interest of specific elite groups. In order to decolonise education, it would be of utmost importance to align the aims and objectives of education with that of democratic education.
后殖民时期印度民族国家的教育发展与殖民历史密不可分。就像其他后殖民国家一样,印度社会通过教育实现的现代化是殖民主义的“本地历史”、“全球设计”和当代全球化进程的产物。现代殖民想象在塑造现代印度精英所学的“学科课程”方面占主导地位。虽然有传教士,一些仁慈的欧洲人,以及当地的知识分子致力于教育事业,以提升印度人民的素质,但英国统治时期主要是促进精英的教育。这种现代殖民想象也塑造了印度民族主义和印度社会精英领导的民族主义自由运动。在一个不同的阶级、种姓、多民族和宗教背景下,这种民族主义的想象往往导致对下层声音的压制。现代印度民族国家的建立,其民主宪法由代表印度社会各阶层(包括15名来自不同背景的妇女)的制宪会议起草,由达利特[i]学者和知识分子B. R. Ambedkar博士主持,承诺建立民主和社会正义。然而,本文认为,如果不将服务于特定精英群体利益的教育目的和目标去殖民化,宪法的承诺就无法实现。为了使教育非殖民化,将教育的宗旨和目标同民主教育的宗旨和目标结合起来是极为重要的。