6 research outputs found
Against the epistemicide. : Itinerant curriculum theory and the reiteration of an epistemology of liberation
Echoing Ettore Scola metaphor âBruti, Sporchi & Cativiâ, this chapter challenges how hegemonic and specific (or so called) counter hegemonic curriculum platforms â so connected with Western Eurocentric Modernity â have been able to colonize the field without any prudency to âfabricateâ and impose a classed, raced and gendered philosophy of praxis, as unique, that drives the field to an ideological surrealism and collective suicide. Such collective suicide framed by a theoretical timesharing unleashed by both dominant and specific counter dominant platforms that tenaciously controlled the circuits of cultural production grooms the field as a ghetto, flooded with rudeness, and miserable ambitions, a theoretical caliphate that wipes out any episteme beyond the Western Eurocentric Modern terrain, insolently droving to sewage of society the needs and desires of students, teachers and the community. Drawing from key decolonial thinkers, this chapter examines the way Western eugenic curriculum of modernity created an abyssal thinking in which âthis sideâ of the line is legitimate and âthe other sideâ has been produced as ânon-existentâ (Sousa Santos B, Another knowledge is possible. Verso, London, 2007). The paper suggests the need to move a post-abyssal curriculum that challenges dominant and counter dominant traditions within âthis sideâ of the line, and respects âthe otherâ side of the line. The paper challenges curriculum studies to assume a non-abyssal position one that respects epistemological diversity. This requires an Itinerant Curriculum Theory (Paraskeva JM, Conflicts in curriculum theory: Challenging hegemonic epistemologies. Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2011), which is a commitment and a ruthless epistemological critique of every existing epistemology