The Black Archive is constitutive of works of literato such as JT Jabavu, Nontsizi Mgqwetho, the artist Gerard Bhengu, and musicians like Busi Mhlongo. This collective resource, which should play a crucial role in curriculating, compels us to consider two questions when rethinking Philosophy curricula: First, pedagogically, how does the epistemic access that the Black Archive affords our context facilitate justice? Second, and importantly, how does it help us in achieving justice? I, here, answer these questions in three moves. First, I consider certain key propositions; namely that decolonisation facilitates epistemic access, and that epistemic access in turn facilitates justice (historical, epistemic, and social). Second, I demonst...
The quest for a just education has, since the existence of education systems, been a part of humanit...
Why do the majority of (white) academics within management and organization studies (MOS) endorse di...
This paper addresses some serious questions in the discussions around Black/African diasporic educat...
South African history is such that Blackness/Indigeneity were excluded from institutions of knowledg...
Impulsive uses of collective memory to rally support for decolonised education, establishing clear d...
I am fortunate to teach at an institution that encourages students to read against the grain of the ...
This study analyses the politics of knowledge, through the political that was the call to dissolve t...
Epistemic Freedom in Africa is about the struggle for African people to think, theorize, interpret t...
Impulsive uses of collective memory to rally support for decolonised education have been a character...
This paper engages with Mudimbe's concept of the ‘colonial library’ with the aim of using this engag...
The article argues for a new way of thinking about knowledge construction in African higher educatio...
This dissertation, using the theoretical framework of Afropessimism, discusses how Blackness is an e...
This roundtable will explore how connections among education, blackness, and digital culture create ...
This disquisition is an inter-disciplinary investigation into some dominant hegemonic narratives of ...
In this article I make the case that epistemic othering constitutes epistemic injustice, which is in...
The quest for a just education has, since the existence of education systems, been a part of humanit...
Why do the majority of (white) academics within management and organization studies (MOS) endorse di...
This paper addresses some serious questions in the discussions around Black/African diasporic educat...
South African history is such that Blackness/Indigeneity were excluded from institutions of knowledg...
Impulsive uses of collective memory to rally support for decolonised education, establishing clear d...
I am fortunate to teach at an institution that encourages students to read against the grain of the ...
This study analyses the politics of knowledge, through the political that was the call to dissolve t...
Epistemic Freedom in Africa is about the struggle for African people to think, theorize, interpret t...
Impulsive uses of collective memory to rally support for decolonised education have been a character...
This paper engages with Mudimbe's concept of the ‘colonial library’ with the aim of using this engag...
The article argues for a new way of thinking about knowledge construction in African higher educatio...
This dissertation, using the theoretical framework of Afropessimism, discusses how Blackness is an e...
This roundtable will explore how connections among education, blackness, and digital culture create ...
This disquisition is an inter-disciplinary investigation into some dominant hegemonic narratives of ...
In this article I make the case that epistemic othering constitutes epistemic injustice, which is in...
The quest for a just education has, since the existence of education systems, been a part of humanit...
Why do the majority of (white) academics within management and organization studies (MOS) endorse di...
This paper addresses some serious questions in the discussions around Black/African diasporic educat...