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What students should know about the humanities


Teboho J. Lebakeng

Abstract

The purpose of the present writer is multiple. It is (a) to consider the core philosophy and politics underpinning the teaching of the  humanities in the light of the ‘’right to conquest’’; (b) to sum up the key features of the struggle for epistemic decolonisation by the African intellectual icons; and (c) to identify the responsibility of a new generation of African scholars in giving meaning and relevance to such disciplines. Pursuant to these issues, the thesis advanced here is that due to the history of colonisation and the attendant  epistemicide in Africa, there is an ethical and educational necessity to inscribe African epistemology and philosophy of  education in the teaching and practice of the humanities. The implications for such inscription speak to the need to address epistemic injustice and cognitive dissonance suffered by African students in the learning of such disciplines. Methodologically, the paper does not look at a  particular discipline but takes a broad generalisation about the humanities, based on desk-top resource material and reflexivity of the author’s positionality.


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eISSN: 2077-8317
print ISSN: 2077-2815