ABSTRACT

By foregrounding language practices in educational settings, this timely volume offers a postcolonial critique of the languaging of higher education and considers how Southern epistemologies can be used to further the decolonization of post-secondary education in the Global South.

Offering a range of contributions from diverse and minoritized scholars based in countries including South Africa, Rwanda, Sudan, Qatar, Turkey, Portugal, Sweden, India, and Brazil, The Languaging of Higher Education in the Global South problematizes the use of language in various areas of higher education. Chapters demonstrate both subtle and explicit ways in which the language of pedagogy, scholarship, policy, and partcipiation endorse and privelege Western constructs and knowledge production, and utilize Southern theories and epistemologies to offer an alternative way forward – practice and research which applies and promotes Southern epistemologies and local knowledges. The volume confronts issues including integrationism, epistemic solidarity, language policy and ideology, multilingualism, and the increasing use of technology in institutions of higher education.

This innovative book will be of interest to researchers, scholars, and postgraduate students in the fields of higher education, applied linguistics, and multicultural education. Those with an interest in the decolonization of education and language will find the book of particular use.

part 1|74 pages

Confronting Epistemological Language Issues

chapter 1|15 pages

Global North Technocratic Discourse in Arab Higher Education

The Case of a North American Technical College in an Arab State

chapter 3|19 pages

Polycentric or Pluricentric?

Epistemic Traps in Sociolinguistic Approaches to Multilingual Portuguese

part 2|78 pages

Language Policy in Postcolonial Academic Contexts

chapter 5|29 pages

Decolonizing Epistemology in Sudanese Linguistics

Integrationist and Political Perspectives

chapter 6|17 pages

Multilingualism in South African Universities

A Reflection from an Integrationist Perspective

chapter 7|14 pages

‘Everyone was Happy When Talking’

Revisiting the Use of Mother Tongues in Kenyan Universities

chapter 8|16 pages

Existential Sociolinguistics

The Fundamentals of the Political Legitimacy of Linguistic Minority Rights

part 4|42 pages

Technology and Decolonial Practices