ABSTRACT

Towards a Just Curriculum Theory: The Epistemicide responds to a need for ‘alternative ways of thinking about alternatively’ about education and curriculum. It challenges the functionalism of both dominant and specific counter-dominant education and curriculum perspectives and in so doing suggests an Itinerant Curriculum Theory (ICT) as a new path for the field. The volume brings challenges critical educators to decolonize and to deterritorialize, providing scholars and educators a more nuanced analysis. By offering strategies to achieve a just curriculum theory, and by positioning curriculum theory to establish social and cognitive justice, this book aims to educate a more just and democratic society. With contributions from leading scholars across the field education, this volume argues that to deny the existence of any epistemological form beyond the Western mode can be a form of social fascism, which leads to an uncritical reading of history. Together, the essays offer and encourage a more deliberative, democratic engagement that seeks to contextualize and bring to life diverse epistemologies, value-sets, disciplines, theories, concepts, and experiences in education and beyond.

chapter 1|49 pages

The Struggle Towards a Non-Functionalist Critical River

Towards a Curriculum of Hope Without Optimism

chapter 2|15 pages

Beyond the Politics of the Big Lie

The Education Deficit and the New Authoritarianism

chapter 3|23 pages

A Non-Occidentalist West?

Learned Ignorance and Ecology of Knowledge

chapter 5|30 pages

Africana Philosophy 1

chapter 6|18 pages

Decolonizing Western Universalisms

Decolonial Pluri-versalism from Aime Cesaire to the Zapatistas 1

chapter 7|16 pages

Against Coloniality

On the Meaning and Significance of the Decolonial Turn

chapter 8|14 pages

Educational Reforms Hostile to the Arts and Humanities

Neoliberalism and Citizenship

chapter 10|13 pages

Toni Morrison and the Discourse of the Other

Against the Hypocrisy of Completeness