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Maniam, Vegneskumar
Postcolonial Directions in Education: Special Issue
2016, Takayama, Keita, Heimans, Stephen, Amazan, Rose, Maniam, Vegnes
This special issue contains five articles that have been written by members of our research network. As we have said above, these articles have emerged out of our combined efforts at grappling collectively with Southern Theory and education. As such the editorial process we have undertaken has been collaborative (although not usually without a deal of debate), and we hope will be productive - in an intellectual, not instrumental sense that is! The articles included here are very diverse in their foci and contexts and we hope that they may stimulate thought and offer resources for, and examples of, doing Southern Theory in Education.
Doing Southern Theory: Towards Alternative Knowledges and Knowledge Practices in/for Education
2016, Takayama, Keita, Heimans, Stephen, Amazan, Rose, Maniam, Vegneskumar
Debates have been under way for some time over the very nature of 'foundational knowledge' in many social science disciplines. At the core of the debates lies the collapse of the universalist premises of disciplinary knowledge. Many scholars have exposed the highly provincial nature of what has been considered 'theory' and its exclusive process of knowledge production which centres largely on the institutions in the global North (Alatas, 2006a, 2013, Chen 2010; Connell, 2007, 2014, 2015; Mignolo, 2011; de Sousa Santos, 2014). For instance, modernity, the central concept in sociological theorizing, has long been conceptualized as a peculiarly Western social phenomenon, disconnected from its underside, coloniality (Bhambra, 2007; Go, 2013). These critiques have shown how the uneven flows of intellectual influence and the intellectual division of labour, which designates the West as the source of 'theories' and the Rest as 'data mine,' underpins the contemporary geopolitics of academic knowledge. Raewyn Connell's (2007) Southern Theory: The global dynamics of knowledge in social science from which this special issue has taken its cues, has both initiated and emerged out of these ongoing critiques of the state of academic knowledge and its processes of production on a global scale.