No Pain No Gain? Reflections on Decolonisation and Higher Education in South Africa

No Pain No Gain? Reflections on Decolonisation and Higher Education in South Africa

Author: 
Chasi, Colin
Place: 
Oxon
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis Group
Date published: 
2019
Record type: 
Responsibility: 
Rodny-Gumede, Ylva, jt. author
Journal Title: 
Africa Education Review
Source: 
Africa Education Review, Vol. 16, Issue No. 5, 2019, pp. 120-133
Abstract: 

Calls for the decolonisation of higher education in South Africa have been punctuated by comments on black pain. This is not surprising if it is acknowledged that violence inordinately marks so much of South African life. What is rarely discussed though is the idea that pain has also come to be fetishised. Pain, for example, is valued as a pedagogical means. While invoking notions of the decolonisation of education that cohere with humanisation, the authors critically reflect on the ways in which pain remains a dehumanising feature of higher education in South Africa. In doing so, they hope to start a discussion around issues seldom addressed more than in deeply felt sentiments that are rarely clarified and defined in terms of their importance for the transformation and decolonisation of higher education.

Language: 
Country focus: 

CITATION: Chasi, Colin. No Pain No Gain? Reflections on Decolonisation and Higher Education in South Africa . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2019. Africa Education Review, Vol. 16, Issue No. 5, 2019, pp. 120-133 - Available at: https://library.au.int/no-pain-no-gain-reflections-decolonisation-and-higher-education-south-africa