1st Edition

Decolonisation, Africanisation and the Philosophy Curriculum

Edited By Edwin Etieyibo Copyright 2018
254 Pages
by Routledge

254 Pages
by Routledge

254 Pages
by Routledge

This book, appropriately titled Decolonisation, Africanisation and the Philosophy Curriculum , signposts and captures issues about philosophy, the philosophy curriculum, and its decolonisation and Africanisation. This topic is of critical importance at present for the discipline of philosophy, not the least because philosophy and the current philosophical canons are perceived to be... Read more

Introduction  Part I: Circling the Task of Decolonisation and Africanisation  1. Afri-decolonisation, Decolonisation, Africanisation and the Task of Africanising the Philosophy Curriculum  2 A defence of Wiredu’s project of conceptual decolonisation  Part II: Methods and Approaches to Africanising the Philosophy Curriculum  3. "Yielding ground to none": Normative perspectives on African philosophy and its curricula  4. Teaching African Philosophy in African institutions of higher learning: The implications for African renaissance  5. Four questions on curriculum development in contemporary South Africa  Part III: Obligations and Need to Africanise the Philosophy Curriculum  6. Teacher and student with a critical pan-epistemic orientation: An ethical necessity for Africanising the educational curriculum in Africa  7. Why ought the philosophy curriculum in universities in Africa be Africanised?  8. Space Contestations and the Teaching of African Philosophy in African Universities  Part IV: Feasibility of Africanising the Philosophy Curriculum  9. The question of recentring Africa: Thoughts and issues from the global South  10. On a contextual South African philosophy curriculum: Towards an option for the excluded  Part V: Problems, Challenges and Prospects of Africanising the Philosophy Curriculum  11. Can the philosophy curriculum be Africanised? An examination of the prospects and challenges of some models of Africanisation  12. On Africanising the philosophy curricula: Challenges and prospects  Part VI: Towards the Africanisation of the Philosophy Curriculum: Suggestions and Possibilities  13. Pursuing the agenda of Africanising philosophy in Africa: Some possibilities  14. Teaching African philosophy alongside Western philosophy: Some advice about topics and texts  15. Africanising the philosophy curriculum through teaching African culture modules: An African Renaissance act  Part VII: Cautionary Notes on the Agenda of Africanising of the Philosophy Curriculum  16. Some comments on Africanising a philosophy curriculum  17. Problematising Western philosophy as one part of Africanising the curriculum  18. Pitfalls of Negritude: Solace-driven tertiary sector reform

Biography

Edwin Etieyibo teaches Philosophy at the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. He is the editor of Perspectives in Social Contract Theory (CRVP, 2018); Method, Substance and the Future of African Philosophy (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018); co-author of Disabilities in Nigeria: Attitudes, Reactions, and Remediation (Hamilton Books, 2017); and the guest editor of the South African Journal of Philosophy special issue on ‘Africanising the Philosophy Curriculum in Universities in Africa’.