First up, Surya Simon and Arzhang Pezhman, UEA, on their work to develop a grassroots decolonising network, which aims "to remain a disruptive force while effecting embedded, sustainable institutional change" #decoloniseenglish
Followed by Dr Asha Rogers & @DrFarihaShaikh, Uni of Birmingham, on establishing a decolonising network there- holding workshops, establishing effective peer support, keeping things local & departmental to increase influence, bringing in students & alumni #decoloniseenglish
At Brighton, emphasis on students' involvement in curricula reform, auditing modules & organising panels and events - "out of 49 primary readings and film sources 34 were written/produced by white men". Excellent pres by recent graduate Rebecca Inniss #decoloniseenglish
Fantastic presentation from Paulette Ennever, Decolonising the Curriculum 4 Educators: “for 100s of years children have been part of an education system which has devalued the experience of the global majority” #decoloniseenglish
Reflects on "powerful destructive processes within the curriculum that have become the norm...the curriculum has been fixed for a purpose". Emphasises active whole-school staff-student engagement & importance of ppl feeling able to speak up & abt these issues #decoloniseenglish
Paulette Ennever notes that in schools students are beginning to question 'where is my history?' + to notice microagressions e.g. when those in power over them presume a Black student is poor without asking, or act surprised when a Black student is articulate #decoloniseenglish
She notes too that students in schools are asking about positive role models - *not just sportspeople* - but scientists, inventors, architects & about their contributions to societies *across the world* (not just in the UK) #decoloniseenglish
Paulette Ennever, Decolonising the Curriculum 4 Educators, finishes with reminder: "the more we can reach out to people & give people guides & ways to look at these issues" the more it "will help us to be stronger & (even) more of a force to be reckoned with” #decoloniseenglish
(the event is actually over now but I'm having a tweet-lag, will resume when I've had a cup of tea. Probably didn't need to use the hashtag on every tweet either but I've started now so will continue...)
Dr Shazia Jagot & @alexandrakreese from @UoYEnglish discussed their department's born multidisciplinary & multi-lingual literature modules.
Strong history of individual decolonising efforts in individual modules but now trying to join things up. #decoloniseenglish
Their aim within @UoYEnglish: to shift unconscious pedagogical position into a conscious + active one - not just *what* is taught but *how* it is taught. #decoloniseenglish
Emphasised involvement of @yorkunisu with decolonising work - students in partnership w academic staff, discussing perspectives on learning & teaching, unconscious bias etc. Also roundtable organised by library on how to decolonise & diversify their collection #decoloniseenglish
Jagot & Kingston-Reese warn abt dangerous institutional slippage btw decolonising + internationalisation, draw on Mignolo & Walsh _On Decoloniality_: always remember that decolonising is an active, political force that is “a way, option, standpoint, analytic, practice + praxis”
Both "chafe at just how ‘English’ literature is considered in the UK" & recommend @zugenia's 'Where do you know from?' exercise, which reminds us "even the most seemingly mundane academic structures & conventions can reproduce colonialist hierarchies of power” #decoloniseenglish
.@fabihaaskari cites Built-in Barriers: The Role of Race in Shaping BME Student Experiences at Lancaster University (July 2020) - an independently researched report surveying 140+ students by Lancaster students who put in OVER 100 HOURS of their OWN time UNPAID #DecoloniseEnglish
65% of students surveyed by @wimcwlancuni feel course content is Eurocentric. One student reported not wanting to speak up in seminars for fear of being seen as ‘an angry woman of colour’ #DecoloniseEnglish
Decolonisation shouldn’t be a “patch” but should be “intentionally embroidered within the very fabric of the curriculum” - beautifully put by @fabihaaskari#DecoloniseEnglish
.@fabihaaskari stresses that "the most important thing departments can do for their students is simply to listen. Discussions between academics and students are priceless & must the foundation of decolonising efforts at any institution" #DecoloniseEnglish
This was such a rich, well put together, energising, inspiring and necessary discussion, thanks so much to all the presenters and facilitators. Had forgotten the live-tweeting adrenaline rush & half of this wasn't even live, phew!
Also, print and newspaper history people, if you can explain how this masterwork came into being, I’d be really interested to know. A fault with the press or type, or human error? #printhistory
now obsessed with this appalling, strange poem warning the earth’s inhabitants of the dangers of nuclear waste storage sites, ten thousand years in the future
“Since today's written languages are unlikely to survive, the research team has considered pictograms and hostile architecture. Texts were proposed to be translated to every UN written language. The design of the site was itself to convey a symbolic message...”
Been emailing a lot of academics I admire with what are probably very silly questions. I’m worried they’ll think I’m an idiot but at the same time university websites do NOT make it EASY to find the information you want, at least not for the right year
Also starting to realise quite how much early-careering is about being on the inside of certain institutions and knowledge structures
Short of being straight and a man, I’m not sure how much more ‘inside’ I could be - if I was any less privileged in any way this could all so quickly and easily feel overwhelmingly opaque
‘as Umberto Eco observes in his book The Infinity of Lists, “what often distinguishes a poetic list from a practical one is only the intention with which we contemplate it.”’ - from this nice @ListologyBlog post: listology.blog/2019/03/17/doe…