Bruno Latour and the myth of autonomous academic discipline : rethinking education in the light of various modes of existence
Abstract
Background: Issues of identity, interdependence, relationality and violence are far larger than
the human species alone, although humanity has often pretended as if it alone were the
beneficiaries of studying such ideas.
Aim: Pedagogically, the complexity of existence beyond human being must influence the
traditional humanities curriculum or risk further isolation and alienation within humanitydominant
narratives.
Setting: As climate change continues to alter our comprehension of what is truly at stake in the
survival of life on this planet, however, humankind needs a complete rethinking of its
relationship with the multiple forms of life that dwell alongside it, as well as the traditional
division between the humanities and the sciences within academic settings.
Methods: It is with this scenario before us that I turn to the work of Bruno Latour who reconceives
of humanity’s relationship with nature as an interdisciplinary and boundarycrossing
project, one that has deep pedagogical implications.
Results: I demonstrate how Latour’s collaborative and highly original work ranges across
disciplines and provides new ways to contemplate research in academia.
Conclusion: Latour’s thought moves beyond polarising anti-humanist language and towards
a way to limit the sovereign claims of humanity, opening discourse towards other non-human
participants.