后殖民视野下非洲历史教学的主要趋势

Raymond Nkwenti Fru
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摘要

历史教育一直是一个备受争议的领域,特别是在历史被巨大的争议、敏感和情感时刻所破坏的背景下。这一现实在非洲大陆更为显著,那里的问题包括奴隶制、殖民、非殖民化、非洲的分裂;边境危机;同一性的复杂性;竞赛;种族隔离、战争、仇外心理;沙文主义;军事政变,强迫驱逐和随后的土地开垦,是其历史特征的一些关键主题和话语。这篇经验反思和理论论文借鉴了研究人员在至少三个非洲国家担任历史教师/讲师的个人经历,并从文献中反思了非洲历史教学的主要趋势。尽管在世纪之交,非洲出现了一股课程去殖民化的浪潮,包括在历史教学中,但文章认为,作为一门学科,历史教学的状况仍有很多值得关注的理由。本文承认,通过后殖民社会文化和认知系统和实践,在课程知识中重新唤起非洲土著的声音,非洲历史课程的重建、非殖民化和非洲化存在着和人道的需要。这篇文章建议,后殖民时期非洲的历史教学和课程需要远离离散的、有时是公开的、英雄的、单向度的、包装精美的大师叙事,这些叙事剥夺了学生批判性地参与和质疑丰富而复杂的历史的机会,这是提高这一学科在非洲大陆相关性的途径。
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Main Trends of History Teaching in Africa From a Postcolonial Perspective
History education has always been a highly contested terrain especially in contexts whose pasts are marred by huge controversial, sensitive and emotive moments. This reality is more significant in the African continent, where issues such as slavery, colonisation, decolonisation, the partition of Africa; border crises; complexity of identity; race; apartheid, wars, xenophobia; chauvinism; military coups, forced evictions and subsequent land reclamations, are some of the key themes and discourses that are characteristic of its history. This experiential reflection and theoretical paper draw from the researcher’s personal experiences as a history teacher/lecturer in at least three African countries and from literature to reflect on the main trends of History teaching and learning in Africa. Although there has been a wave of curricular decolonisation in Africa at the turn of the century, including in History teaching, the article argues that there is still a lot of reasons to be concerned about the state of history teaching as a subject. The article acknowledges an existential and humane need for a reconstruction, decolonisation and Africanisation of the history curriculum in Africa by means of postcolonial socio-cultural and epistemic systems and practices that reclaim indigenous African voices in curriculum knowledge. The article recommends that history teaching and curriculum in postcolonial Africa need to move away from discrete and sometimes overt, heroic, one-dimensional and neatly packaged master narratives that deny students the opportunity to critically engage and interrogate the rich and complex histories as a pathway to improve the relevance of the subject in the continent.
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