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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University of Bristol |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | Feb 01, 2021 |
| End Date | Jan 31, 2027 |
| Duration | 2,190 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 949378 |
AFRIUNI explores cultural representations and lived experiences of university life on the African continent.
Building on insights from critical pedagogy and decolonial thought, the project considers in material, affective, and aesthetic terms the forms of structural and epistemic violence, physical discomfort, and individual and collective self-realization that obtain within these contested institutions. The project asks: 1.
How are African universities represented in creative work and how do these representations inform the perception of education? 2. What do student experiences of campus life tell us about the human experience of uncertainty in the global South? 3. What are the languages of creative expression in these universities and how does translation manifest?
What does multilingualism contribute to the experiences of hope, resilience, uncertainty and despair experienced there? 4. How do debates around epistemic justice and engaged pedagogy manifest in historically francophone sites? 5.
How can fine-grained understanding of cultural production and reception on campus inform local and global thinking about education? The work responds to these questions by exploring case studies in Senegal, Cte dIvoire, Benin and Cameroon.
The projects first strand will document and analyse cultural representations (including literature, hip hop, film, theatre) of the universities; the second strand will map the histories of literary curricula/pedagogies; the third strand will focus on students lived experiences.
Throughout, the project will test and develop cutting-edge decolonial (participatory, co-productive, digital) methodologies for Humanities research.
AFRIUNI is acutely attuned both to the legacies of imperial linguistic and cultural structures and the significance of place-based learning.
It will drive forward connections between these case studies and local, continental, and global scales of debate concerning decoloniality, creativity, and education.
University of Bristol
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