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El. knyga: Working with Theories of Refusal and Decolonization in Higher Education

Edited by (The University of British Columbia, Canada), Edited by (OPEN UNIVERSITY OF CYPRUS, CYPRUS)

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This volume argues that refusal is a viable political ethics in education. It is an ethics that allows space for new possibilities to emerge, with the potential to enrich higher education study and pedagogies in the future. Chapters examine the ethical, epistemological, political and affective premises of refusing the colonial university, and reflect upon what refusal means for higher education decolonization across international settings. Refusal marks a political ethos and praxis that denies, resists, reframes and redirects colonial and neoliberal logics, while asserting diverse sovereignties and lifeworlds. Whereas resistance may reinscribe the weakness of the colonized in the power relations with the colonizer, refusal interrupts the smooth operation of power relations, denying the authority of the settler state and remaking the rules of engagement. It is a political stance and action that denies the very legitimacy of power over the subjugated. This collection views refusal not as an end in itself, nor as a mode of critique, but as a necessary first step for educators and students in higher education to invest in the idea of radically different modes of futurity. It explores how educators and students in higher education can invent pedagogies of refusal that function ethically, affectively and politically, and asks: What do pedagogies of refusal look like? How might western universities sustain and support refusal, rather than discipline it? What assumptions are sustained by ruling out certain educational futures as out of bounds, or impossible? This book will be important reading for researchers, scholars and educators in Decolonizing Education, Higher Education Transformation, and Philosophy of Education. It will also be valuable to policymakers and activists who are considering how refusal might be carried out within and outside institutions.



This volume argues that refusal is a viable political ethics in education. It is an ethics that allows space for new possibilities to emerge, with the potential enrich higher education study and pedagogies in the future.

Series Editors Introduction.  Introduction: Refusing the Colonial
University.  Part
1. Refusing Coloniality of Life-and-Death in Higher
Education. 
1. Conditions of Arrival: On Refusing to Be Included.
2. The
Affective Dimensions of Refusal in Higher Education Decolonization:
Pedagogical Implications.
3. Populating the Savage Slot: Decolonizing
Autoethnographic Refusals in Higher Education.
4. Refusing Higher Education:
Vivacide and the Economies of Dissipation. Part
2. Antiracist Refusal and
Political Pedagogical Action. 
5. Culturally Responsive Pedagogies:
Australian Colonial logic of the Centre and Aboriginal Refusal.
6. Angers
erotic politics: Antiracist refusal as decolonial political action.
7.
(Re)imagining HESA through Refusal; The Complexities of Confronting
Colonialism the University.
8. Plastic Refusals; The Africanisation Challenge
of South African Higher Education. Part
3. (Po)ethical Praxis of Refusal.
9.
Refusing Archives of Possibility; A Decolonial Praxis of Temporalizing
Ethics.
10. Refusing coloniality; An ethical praxis of paying attention to
words in academic writing.
11. Slow reading as refusal; Doing higher
education differently. Afterword: begin with a refusal.
Petra Mikulan is Sessional Lecturer of Educational Studies at the University of British Columbia.

Michalinos Zembylas is Professor of Educational Theory and Curriculum Studies at the Open University of Cyprus.