Predicaments of Knowledge explores the difficult questions South African universities face after apartheid: Is there a difference between Africanising a university and decolonising a university? What about differences between deracialising and decolonising the curricula taught at universities across disciplines?
Through a range of reflections on race, language, colonial, postcolonial and decolonial knowledge projects from Africa and Latin America, this book explores the pitfalls and possibilities that face a post-apartheid generation inventing the future of knowledge.
The distinctions between Africanisation, decolonisation and deracialisation are often conflated in the political demands put to universities. Suren Pillay emphasises all three as important but distinct imperatives. If an intervention is undertaken with the aim of decolonising the university while actually addressing deracialisation, it can undermine the effort to decolonise. Similarly, if an initiative to Africanise the university does not address decolonisation, both processes can be undermined.
Drawing on more than two and a half decades of the author's participation in these debates, these essays aim to intervene in and elucidate questions and predicaments, rather than offering blue prints; they are dialogical in spirit even when polemical in tone. In conversation with existing continental African and Latin American experiences, they offer incisive reflections on current South African debates.
Reflections on race, language, colonial, postcolonial and decolonial knowledge projects that explore the pitfalls and possibilities that face South African universities and a post-apartheid generation inventing the future of knowledge.
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Acronyms and Abbreviations
Introduction: The University, Then and Now
Chapter 1: Anticolonial Nationalism and Worldliness: Remaking the Humanities after Apartheid
Chapter 2: Between Transformation, Deracialisation and Decolonisation
Chapter 3 Provincialising Decolonial Theory: Comparing the Legacies of Colonialism in Africa and Latin America
Chapter 4: Conquests, Contracts and Modernity: Political Theory and Teaching the State in Africa
Chapter 5 Justice and the Historically Disadvantaged
Chapter 6 Decolonising the History of Scientific Ways of Knowing
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Timely and expansive ruminations on the purpose of the university and knowledge production in post-apartheid South Africa that help us think through the material construction of universities across the African continent. At its heart, this book invites us to contend with the colonial roots of all disciplines – the humanities and the social sciences, in particular – precisely to plot a new vision for what they can do and how they can be done. For those of us invested in making or consuming knowledge, as well as reconstituting the university, it is essential reading.
These essays contribute to the debate about what it means to decolonise, deracialise, and transform knowledge after apartheid by problematising and clarifying the stakes involved.