Basotho ontology of disability: An afrocentric onto-epistemology

This theoretical article offers a diachronic analysis that is a rebuttal of ontological hegemony of disability as negative. The article is premised on the Ubuntu paradigm from which African wisdom is mostly anchored in idioms and proverbs. This article emerges as a reflection on a Sesotho proverb: S...

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Main Author: Maximus Monaheng Sefotho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-03-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021006435
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spelling doaj-cdcfb8ea8cc34c83afbebe4a61b767e52021-04-09T10:09:21ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402021-03-0173e06540Basotho ontology of disability: An afrocentric onto-epistemologyMaximus Monaheng Sefotho0Corresponding author.; University of Johannesburg, Faculty of Education, Department of Educational Psychology, South AfricaThis theoretical article offers a diachronic analysis that is a rebuttal of ontological hegemony of disability as negative. The article is premised on the Ubuntu paradigm from which African wisdom is mostly anchored in idioms and proverbs. This article emerges as a reflection on a Sesotho proverb: Sehole ho ‘Ma-sona ha se lahloe (A child with a disability is never abandoned by the mother). The aim of this article is to demonstrate that Basotho ontology of disability portrays an ubuntu cultural acceptance of people with disabilities as equally human as all human beings. A purposive focus group sample of ten parents of youth with intellectual disability discussed the proverb and shared their experiences of raising a child with disability; and, what the proverb: Sehole ho ‘Ma-sona ha se lahloe mean to them? The qualitative data from the focus group was used to support the theoretical adaptation of Basotho ontology in revising the current understanding of disability. The themes reported in this article are: experiences of raising a child with intellectual disability and a child's love begins with a parent.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021006435BasothoDisabilityOnto-epistemologyPaternalismProverbsSehole
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maximus Monaheng Sefotho
spellingShingle Maximus Monaheng Sefotho
Basotho ontology of disability: An afrocentric onto-epistemology
Heliyon
Basotho
Disability
Onto-epistemology
Paternalism
Proverbs
Sehole
author_facet Maximus Monaheng Sefotho
author_sort Maximus Monaheng Sefotho
title Basotho ontology of disability: An afrocentric onto-epistemology
title_short Basotho ontology of disability: An afrocentric onto-epistemology
title_full Basotho ontology of disability: An afrocentric onto-epistemology
title_fullStr Basotho ontology of disability: An afrocentric onto-epistemology
title_full_unstemmed Basotho ontology of disability: An afrocentric onto-epistemology
title_sort basotho ontology of disability: an afrocentric onto-epistemology
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2021-03-01
description This theoretical article offers a diachronic analysis that is a rebuttal of ontological hegemony of disability as negative. The article is premised on the Ubuntu paradigm from which African wisdom is mostly anchored in idioms and proverbs. This article emerges as a reflection on a Sesotho proverb: Sehole ho ‘Ma-sona ha se lahloe (A child with a disability is never abandoned by the mother). The aim of this article is to demonstrate that Basotho ontology of disability portrays an ubuntu cultural acceptance of people with disabilities as equally human as all human beings. A purposive focus group sample of ten parents of youth with intellectual disability discussed the proverb and shared their experiences of raising a child with disability; and, what the proverb: Sehole ho ‘Ma-sona ha se lahloe mean to them? The qualitative data from the focus group was used to support the theoretical adaptation of Basotho ontology in revising the current understanding of disability. The themes reported in this article are: experiences of raising a child with intellectual disability and a child's love begins with a parent.
topic Basotho
Disability
Onto-epistemology
Paternalism
Proverbs
Sehole
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021006435
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