非殖民化是非洲化吗?真正的非洲大学的归属政治

IF 0.5 3区 社会学 Q3 AREA STUDIES Social Dynamics-A Journal of African Studies Pub Date : 2023-05-04 DOI:10.1080/02533952.2023.2226500
A. Nyamnjoh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要尽管非洲化仍然是知识非殖民化的一个流行习语,但它引发了公民身份、身份和归属感等难题,以及它们的包容性和排斥性。以“归属政治”为概念框架,我揭示了非殖民化在实质性坚持非洲性的基础上所涉及的紧张关系。这个镜头集中了一些重要的问题,比如谁能成功地宣称自己是非洲人,以及在智力上成为非洲人意味着什么。回顾前者,无论是在历史上还是在学生呼吁在南非高等教育中建立一所非殖民化的非洲大学之后,我都表明,非洲性很少通过第一原则来解决。关于寻求代表权的非洲人,经常有相互竞争的说法。因此,我认为,将非殖民化定义为非洲化的直观性消除了使大学更具非洲特色的归属政治,而这种政治有时是由种族、阶级、民族和土著的排斥性配置所形成的。
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Is decolonisation Africanisation? The politics of belonging in the truly African university
ABSTRACT While Africanisation remains a popular idiom for intellectual decolonisation, it raises difficult issues around citizenship, identity and belonging, alongside their constitutive dynamics of inclusion and exclusion. Using the “politics of belonging” as a conceptual frame, I unpack the tensions involved in grounding decolonisation in a substantive insistence on Africanness. This lens centres important questions like who can successfully claim Africanity and what it means to be intellectually African. Reflecting on the former, both historically and in the aftermath of student calls for a decolonised African university in South African higher education, I show that Africanness is rarely settled by first principles. There are often competing claims regarding the African for whom representation is sought. I therefore contend that the intuitiveness of framing decolonisation as Africanisation elides the politics of belonging that characterises talk of making universities more African, which is sometimes shaped by exclusionary configurations of race, class, nation and indigeneity.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: Social Dynamics is the journal of the Centre for African Studies at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. It has been published since 1975, and is committed to advancing interdisciplinary academic research, fostering debate and addressing current issues pertaining to the African continent. Articles cover the full range of humanities and social sciences including anthropology, archaeology, economics, education, history, literary and language studies, music, politics, psychology and sociology.
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