Owning your emotions or sentimental navel-gazing: Digital storytelling with South African pre-service student educators

Literature argues that for post-conflict pedagogies to facilitate student engagement across difference it requires emotional engagement with the subject. However, how to achieve such emotional engagement, without falling into the trap of sentimentality, is an area that is under-researched. This pape...

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Main Authors: Daniela Gachago, Eunice Ivala, Agnes Chigona, Janet Condy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2015-10-01
Series:Cultural Science
Online Access:https://culturalscience.org/articles/80
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spelling doaj-187d87f4c346402283e0dd6ba3cd63522020-11-24T21:04:01ZengUbiquity PressCultural Science1836-04162015-10-0182224210.5334/csci.8080Owning your emotions or sentimental navel-gazing: Digital storytelling with South African pre-service student educatorsDaniela Gachago0Eunice Ivala1Agnes Chigona2Janet Condy3Cape Peninsula University of TechnologyCape Peninsula University of TechnologyCape Peninsula University of TechnologyCape Peninsula University of TechnologyLiterature argues that for post-conflict pedagogies to facilitate student engagement across difference it requires emotional engagement with the subject. However, how to achieve such emotional engagement, without falling into the trap of sentimentality, is an area that is under-researched. This paper reflects on conversations with South African students in a final year pre-service teacher-training programme, who developed digital stories as a vehicle for student engagement across difference. Applying ‘critical emotional reflexivity’ (Zembylas 2011) as an analytical framework, we found that students described the digital storytelling process as opening up different ways of being with/for the ‘Other’ and allowing them to start questioning cherished beliefs and assumptions about the ‘Other’. However, they had difficulties in placing themselves in a bigger historical and socio-cultural context. Furthermore, the specific set-up of the project made it difficult to track lasting social change within students, the fourth element of Zembylas’ theoretical framework. Findings also confirmed the potential of digital stories to lead to sentimentality and ‘passive empathy’ (Boler 1999), characterised by pity from the part of the privileged observer and resentment from the subjugated storyteller. We recommend adding a historical-political analysis of previous students’ stories to the digital storytelling process in order to help students deconstruct positions premised on the existence of clearly differentiated identities and to consciously create spaces where a reflection on the emotions students encountered while sharing and listening to their stories can be facilitated.https://culturalscience.org/articles/80
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniela Gachago
Eunice Ivala
Agnes Chigona
Janet Condy
spellingShingle Daniela Gachago
Eunice Ivala
Agnes Chigona
Janet Condy
Owning your emotions or sentimental navel-gazing: Digital storytelling with South African pre-service student educators
Cultural Science
author_facet Daniela Gachago
Eunice Ivala
Agnes Chigona
Janet Condy
author_sort Daniela Gachago
title Owning your emotions or sentimental navel-gazing: Digital storytelling with South African pre-service student educators
title_short Owning your emotions or sentimental navel-gazing: Digital storytelling with South African pre-service student educators
title_full Owning your emotions or sentimental navel-gazing: Digital storytelling with South African pre-service student educators
title_fullStr Owning your emotions or sentimental navel-gazing: Digital storytelling with South African pre-service student educators
title_full_unstemmed Owning your emotions or sentimental navel-gazing: Digital storytelling with South African pre-service student educators
title_sort owning your emotions or sentimental navel-gazing: digital storytelling with south african pre-service student educators
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Cultural Science
issn 1836-0416
publishDate 2015-10-01
description Literature argues that for post-conflict pedagogies to facilitate student engagement across difference it requires emotional engagement with the subject. However, how to achieve such emotional engagement, without falling into the trap of sentimentality, is an area that is under-researched. This paper reflects on conversations with South African students in a final year pre-service teacher-training programme, who developed digital stories as a vehicle for student engagement across difference. Applying ‘critical emotional reflexivity’ (Zembylas 2011) as an analytical framework, we found that students described the digital storytelling process as opening up different ways of being with/for the ‘Other’ and allowing them to start questioning cherished beliefs and assumptions about the ‘Other’. However, they had difficulties in placing themselves in a bigger historical and socio-cultural context. Furthermore, the specific set-up of the project made it difficult to track lasting social change within students, the fourth element of Zembylas’ theoretical framework. Findings also confirmed the potential of digital stories to lead to sentimentality and ‘passive empathy’ (Boler 1999), characterised by pity from the part of the privileged observer and resentment from the subjugated storyteller. We recommend adding a historical-political analysis of previous students’ stories to the digital storytelling process in order to help students deconstruct positions premised on the existence of clearly differentiated identities and to consciously create spaces where a reflection on the emotions students encountered while sharing and listening to their stories can be facilitated.
url https://culturalscience.org/articles/80
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