This paper analyses my journey as an early career postcolonial and poststructural theorist and teacher. I ask how different ways of knowing and engaging with the “developing Other” can be incorporated into teaching praxis and curriculum planning? The “developing Other” refers to those and that which is othered in the binary oppositions of developed/developing. The paper calls for a better understanding and incorporation of poststructuralism within the classroom by highlighting the uses of poststructural concepts, including discourse, subjectivity, and reflexivity in praxis. The paper begins by introducing my rationale, providing a discussion of the key theoretical concepts I use, and finishes by demonstrating these concepts in action. This ...