Black feminist intellectual activism: a transformative pedagogy at a South African university
This dissertation engages with critical pedagogic theories and activism from a black feminist perspective. The central argument is that education is not only confined to the formal classroom but also takes place in the most unlikely places outside the classroom. This work is premised on the educatio...
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University of Cape Town
2016
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20364 |
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-203642020-07-22T05:08:04Z Black feminist intellectual activism: a transformative pedagogy at a South African university Hames, Mary Margaret Philome Bennett, Jane Gender Studies This dissertation engages with critical pedagogic theories and activism from a black feminist perspective. The central argument is that education is not only confined to the formal classroom but also takes place in the most unlikely places outside the classroom. This work is premised on the educational philosophies of liberation, embodiment and freedom of the oppressed and the marginalised. The qualitative research is largely presented as ethnographical research, with the researcher located as both participant in the evolvement of the two educational programmes and as writer of this dissertation. Both educational programmes deal with performance and performativity and aim to give voice to the marginalised bodies and lives in the university environment. The research demonstrates how two marginalised groups claim space on campus through performativity involving the body and voice. In the Edudrama, Reclaiming the P…Word, young black women, via representation of word and body, transform the performance space into one in which the misogynistic and racist gaze is transformed. This feminist theatre is intrinsically related to the feminist political work of reclamation of the black female body, which became invisible and objectified for abuse under colonialism, apartheid and patriarchy. The various feminist elements and processes involved in creating feminist text and theatre are discussed. The praxis involved in these processes is then theorised in terms of critical pedagogy as black feminist intellectual activism. In the case of the lesbian, gay and transgender programme, Loud Enuf, the bodies and voices are used differently in the public campus domain to challenge homophobia. This programme is used to raise awareness about sex, sexuality, sexual orientation and gender identity. This programme is intensely political and challenges ambiguous understandings regarding the notion of equality in South Africa post-1994. 2016-07-15T11:17:48Z 2016-07-15T11:17:48Z 2016 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20364 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities African Gender Institute |
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English |
format |
Doctoral Thesis |
sources |
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topic |
Gender Studies |
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Gender Studies Hames, Mary Margaret Philome Black feminist intellectual activism: a transformative pedagogy at a South African university |
description |
This dissertation engages with critical pedagogic theories and activism from a black feminist perspective. The central argument is that education is not only confined to the formal classroom but also takes place in the most unlikely places outside the classroom. This work is premised on the educational philosophies of liberation, embodiment and freedom of the oppressed and the marginalised. The qualitative research is largely presented as ethnographical research, with the researcher located as both participant in the evolvement of the two educational programmes and as writer of this dissertation. Both educational programmes deal with performance and performativity and aim to give voice to the marginalised bodies and lives in the university environment. The research demonstrates how two marginalised groups claim space on campus through performativity involving the body and voice. In the Edudrama, Reclaiming the P…Word, young black women, via representation of word and body, transform the performance space into one in which the misogynistic and racist gaze is transformed. This feminist theatre is intrinsically related to the feminist political work of reclamation of the black female body, which became invisible and objectified for abuse under colonialism, apartheid and patriarchy. The various feminist elements and processes involved in creating feminist text and theatre are discussed. The praxis involved in these processes is then theorised in terms of critical pedagogy as black feminist intellectual activism. In the case of the lesbian, gay and transgender programme, Loud Enuf, the bodies and voices are used differently in the public campus domain to challenge homophobia. This programme is used to raise awareness about sex, sexuality, sexual orientation and gender identity. This programme is intensely political and challenges ambiguous understandings regarding the notion of equality in South Africa post-1994. |
author2 |
Bennett, Jane |
author_facet |
Bennett, Jane Hames, Mary Margaret Philome |
author |
Hames, Mary Margaret Philome |
author_sort |
Hames, Mary Margaret Philome |
title |
Black feminist intellectual activism: a transformative pedagogy at a South African university |
title_short |
Black feminist intellectual activism: a transformative pedagogy at a South African university |
title_full |
Black feminist intellectual activism: a transformative pedagogy at a South African university |
title_fullStr |
Black feminist intellectual activism: a transformative pedagogy at a South African university |
title_full_unstemmed |
Black feminist intellectual activism: a transformative pedagogy at a South African university |
title_sort |
black feminist intellectual activism: a transformative pedagogy at a south african university |
publisher |
University of Cape Town |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20364 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT hamesmarymargaretphilome blackfeministintellectualactivismatransformativepedagogyatasouthafricanuniversity |
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1719331422611701760 |