Gesturing towards decolonial teaching praxis and unlearning colonial methods: teaching reflections in the struggle to decolonise research methodologies

ABSTRACT In this article, we reflect on our experiences teaching and learning in a digital course for PhD students, Oxford-UNISA Decolonising Research Methodologies. The aim of the course was to ‘gesture’ beyond the coloniality of knowledge by thinking ‘otherwise’ about research methodologies. As a decolonial teaching praxis, gesturing embraces experimentation, humility and becoming as we pursue decolonial being/thinking and seek/create coexistence, well-being and dignity beyond its constraints. We conceive of co-teaching as co-learning and co-becoming. Teaching as becoming, we argue, means engaging with students without a rigid structuring telos. We revisit video footage from the class, course materials and review insights from our students to reflect upon the substance and configurations of our co-teaching. We analyse the significance of ‘keeping the fire’ of our shared intellectual projects, even as we remain situated within colonial institutions. Three interrelated challenges emerged while teaching decolonial geographies and decolonising methodologies in this online course. These dynamics include: (a) the challenges of cultivating student-teacher trust in digital exchanges; (b) the aspiration to embolden transdisciplinary engagements in the face of logistical, temporal and practical constraints, including ‘settler time’ and our ties to stated disciplines; and (c) the significance of co-presence and shared commitment to challenge academic hierarchies.

[1]  P. Daley,et al.  Defiant scholarship: Dismantling coloniality in contemporary African geographies† , 2022, Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography.

[2]  S. Godsell Decolonisation of history assessment: An exploration , 2021, South African Journal of Higher Education.

[3]  P. Guinard,et al.  Emotions from and beyond the classroom. An experiment in teaching and sharing emotional methodologies in a geography course , 2021, Journal of Geography in Higher Education.

[4]  I. Ahmed Dear science and other stories , 2021, Social & Cultural Geography.

[5]  R. Hall,et al.  Struggling for the anti-racist university: learning from an institution-wide response to curriculum decolonisation , 2021, Teaching in Higher Education.

[6]  B. Hamamra,et al.  ‘Can the subaltern speak?’: COVID-19 and decolonial pedagogy in Palestinian universities , 2021, Journal for Cultural Research.

[7]  K. Devkota Inequalities reinforced through online and distance education in the age of COVID-19: The case of higher education in Nepal , 2021, International Review of Education.

[8]  Martin Müller Worlding geography: From linguistic privilege to decolonial anywheres , 2021, Progress in Human Geography.

[9]  Andres Guzman Race After Technology: Abolitionist Tools for the New Jim Code , 2020, Information, Communication & Society.

[10]  S. Merz Race after technology. Abolitionist tools for the new Jim Code , 2020, Ethnic and Racial Studies.

[11]  J. Rivera Designs for the Pluriverse: Radical Interdependence, Autonomy, and the Making of Worlds , 2019, Design and Culture.

[12]  R. R. Pessoa,et al.  Challenges of a decolonial undertaking in teacher education , 2019, Calidoscópio.

[13]  C. Dennis Decolonising Education: A Pedagogic Intervention , 2018 .

[14]  Sarah de Leeuw,et al.  Unsettling decolonizing geographies , 2018, Geography Compass.

[15]  C. Aguilera Beyond settler time: temporal sovereignty and indigenous self-determination , 2018 .

[16]  A. Escobar Designs for the Pluriverse: Radical Interdependence, Autonomy, and the Making of Worlds , 2018 .

[17]  R. Dini Black Skin, White Masks , 2017 .

[18]  A. Jindal Can the Subaltern Speak , 2017 .

[19]  J. Law What's wrong with a one-world world? , 2015 .

[20]  Charles Crothers,et al.  Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples , 2014 .

[21]  R. Grosfoguel The Structure of Knowledge in Westernized Universities: Epistemic Racism/Sexism and the Four Genocides/Epistemicides of the Long 16th Century , 2013 .

[22]  Walter D. Mignolo The Darker Side of Western Modernity: Global Futures, Decolonial Options , 2011 .

[23]  R. Johnston Geopolitics and Empire: the Legacy of Halford Mackinder , 2010 .

[24]  S. Wynter,et al.  Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation--An Argument , 2004 .

[25]  S. F. Alatas Academic Dependency and the Global Division of Labour in the Social Sciences , 2003 .

[26]  Linda Smith,et al.  Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples , 2000 .

[27]  Gearóid Ó. Tuathail Critical geopolitics : the politics of writing global space , 1998 .

[28]  Ndlovu-Gatsheni A World without Others? Specter of Difference and Toxic Identitarian Politics , 2018 .

[29]  Morgan Ndlovu Coloniality of Knowledge and the Challenge of Creating African Futures , 2018 .

[30]  Lewis R. Gordon,et al.  Shifting the geography of reason in an age of disciplinary decadence , 2011 .

[31]  Graham Crossan Johannesburg, South Africa , 1977 .