Who Are the Humanities for? Decolonizing the Humanities

Drees makes a strong case for the importance of the humanities in the university, providing an excellent resource for anyone in the Western Academy. Its usefulness for those who want to work outside the West is limited, however, because he does not engage with literature that challenges its methods...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Zygon
Main Author: Stenmark, Lisa L. 1961- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Wiley-Blackwell 2021
In: Zygon
Further subjects:B Ontology
B Epistemology
B critical theories
B epistemic responsibilities
B Hannah Arendt
B Decoloniality
B feminist philosophy
B Simone de Beauvoir
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Summary:Drees makes a strong case for the importance of the humanities in the university, providing an excellent resource for anyone in the Western Academy. Its usefulness for those who want to work outside the West is limited, however, because he does not engage with literature that challenges its methods and disciplines. If we are to have a positive global impact, we need to do more than clarify existing boundaries, we need to blur them, beginning with an examination of inherent biases reflected in its history, structure, and content. This article focuses on one critique, a decolonial critique of the Western view that ontology precedes epistemology (an external reality produces knowledge). Outside the modern Western Academy, epistemologies create ontologies (epistemic creations/stories about the world give us a sense of the world and its materiality). I describe a relational understanding of knowledge and how this changes our understanding of the humanities and our epistemic responsibilities.
ISSN:1467-9744
Contains:Enthalten in: Zygon
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1111/zygo.12726