Blackhood as a category in contemporary discourses on Black Studies : an existentialist philosophical defence
| dc.contributor.author | Lamola, M. John | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2022-10-19T08:41:23Z | |
| dc.date.available | 2022-10-19T08:41:23Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2018 | |
| dc.description.abstract | Background: An era and academic milieu that clamour at post-racialist and globalist theoretical frameworks juxtaposed with evidence of growing anti-black dehumanizing racism, and the persistence of psycho-social alienation of black learners in multi-racial educational institutions. Aim: To engage in a critical philosophical–phenomenological and political review of the experience of being-black-in-the-world as a factor that justifies the establishment and maintenance of Black Studies programmes. The article seeks to contribute to the debate on the vagaries accompanying the institutionalisation of culturo-epistemic exclusive spaces for socially suppressed selfhoods in a postmodern academy. Setting: Racialised social environments as affecting Higher Education, with post-apartheid South Africa as a case. Methods: Existential Philosophy, Black Consciousness and Paulo Freire’s philosophy of education. Results: The category of blackness as derived from a Fanonian existential phenomenology and Steve Biko’s perspective, contrasted against Achille Mbembe’s semiological–hermeneutic and cosmopolitan treatment of blackness, is an existential–ontological reality that should function as a cardinal category in educational planning, justifying specialised learning and knowledgeexchange spaces for the re-humanisation of black existence. Conclusion: The experience of black existential reality, conceived from blackhood as an external recognition and an internally self-negotiated consciousness within the social immanence of whiteness, justifies the institutionalisation of learning spaces and programmes that are aimed at nurturing antiracist black self-realisation, namely Black Studies. | en_US |
| dc.identifier.citation | Lamola, M.J. 2018. ‘Blackhood as a category in contemporary discourses on Black Studies : an existentialist philosophical defence’. Transformation in Higher Education 3:1-9. [https://doi.org/10.4102/the. v3i0.55] | en_US |
| dc.identifier.issn | 2415-0991 | |
| dc.identifier.issn | 2519-5638 (Online) | |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10394/39935 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://doi.org/10.4102/the.v3i0.55 | |
| dc.language.iso | en | en_US |
| dc.publisher | AOSIS | en_US |
| dc.title | Blackhood as a category in contemporary discourses on Black Studies : an existentialist philosophical defence | en_US |
| dc.type | Article | en_US |
