How is the university centring its African identity through scholarship, teaching and learning practices, or activist initiatives?
Afrocentric actions | H.1 Actions taken which adopt an Afrocentric lens, centre the African continent, or critically respond to UCT’s African identity within curriculum, pedagogy, research, through workshops, trainings or discussions, co- or extra-curricular activities, through supporting international students and challenging xenophobia within the learning environment. |
In parallel to benchmark D (Place and Space), this benchmark focuses on centring the African continent and employing and Afrocentric lens within UCT. Many departments reported achieving this benchmark, however it’s important to question the impact of these actions. For example, do actions critically engage with the complexity and vastness of the African continent? Do actions meaningfully unpack the dynamics of power and violence within the African continent as is apparent in patriarchal, homophobic and transphobic practices; undemocratic governance practices; or violence fuelled by socio-economic disparities? These are some of the questions that can assist in making sense of the actions taken under this benchmark.
Across UCT, many programmes and interventions have a specific focus on Africa and attempt to recentre content through the lens of Africa as an epistemic location. Entities reported the following actions:
Who contributed tothis benchmark?
Seven faculties and five non-academic departments contributed to this benchmark.
How effective were the actions?
This benchmark aims to capture how the university is centring its African identity through scholarship, teaching and learning practices, and activist initiatives. In 2021, UCT achieved this benchmark through prioritising Afrocentrism in research, supporting African students and hosting cultural activities to mark Africa Day and other important celebrations. While some of these actions (such as the focus on research) are likely to critically engage the African continent and African epistemic practices, others – such as marking Africa Day – are unlikely to have the same level of critical impact. In addition, while UCT does support a small number of students from other African countries to study at UCT, this doesn’t take away from the grossly xenophobic context, in the form of regressive legal practices towards foreign nations and xenophobic social and behavioural norms.
Recommendations
Efforts that seek to centre UCT’s African identity need to do so in a critical manner. In order to better meet this benchmark, UCT’s own positionality needs to be acknowledged, so that its efforts to centre its African identity disturb rather than accept systems of power on the African continent.
An example of a good practice
The Institute for Humanities in Africa (HUMA) African Epistemologies Advanced Seminar Series: The African Epistemologies Advanced Seminar Series aimed to showcase African knowledge systems and traditions, especially those not granted adequate visibility or centrality in hegemonic academic curricula. African and Africanist philosophers are prominently featured, but overall, the series encompassed an interdisciplinary orientation. Apart from the central themes of African philosophy, the series also invited speakers to reflect on the questions of African feminisms, pan-Africanism, race, interculturality and the conundrums of protohistory.
The forum is based at the Centre for African Studies and provides a platform to centre indigenous knowledge and activism. The A/Xarra Forum established a Khoekhoegowab Curriculum Review Committee to guide the rollout of Khoekhoegowab language teaching on an ongoing basis and to situate the programme centrally within a decolonial pedagogical online framework. The online course was a first of its kind in socially responsive teaching in higher education in South Africa during COVID-19. While most of the participants were from the Cape Metro, the programme attracted interest from as far as Barrydale, Swellendam, George, Oudsthoorn and Gauteng, which really expanded the outreach of the language offering.
Attempting to critically engage with African identity in a context where there are diverse perspectives and romanticised notions can be difficult. At UCT sometimes the easier option is taken – that is using cultural and celebration days to share food and dress, and in so doing, connecting across differences and possibly building solidarity. While these events are useful, they do not often lead to critical engagement on Africanness or reflect on the power dynamics at play within the continent. To create an environment in which UCT owns its African identity, it’s important for programmes and actions to encourage a deep reflection and response to Africa’s unique challenges and innovations. This would involve stronger partnerships with African institutions (as has emerged in 2021), which contribute to advocacy and activism in addition to research, teaching and learning.
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Mama Thembi – one of the three Thembis of Phillippi by women sculptors Angela Mac Pherson, Jen Bam and Sean Mac Pherson. Commissioned by the UCT GSB, the concept is a celebration of women as holders and creators of safe spaces. The vision was for these sculptures to create areas in the open back area of Phillippi Village to seed the future garden, and to create places of safety for plants, birds and people to gather and grow in the harsh climate. Monwabisi Dasi did the welding work with the help of 36 other artists and artisans from Phillippi, Napier and Muizenberg.
The UCT Transformation Report 2021 is titled “Fear, flame and metamorphosis: transformation, diversity and inclusion in uncertain times”. It is titled to reflect that in 2021, the UCT community was challenged with racism, queer- and transphobia, and socio-economic disparities. The fire in the Jagger Reading Room brought forward important questions about how coloniality and gatekeeping continue to frame UCT as an exclusive and inaccessible space. Yet even with these challenges the university, through transformation agents, was able to transform these difficult realities through tactical and innovative actions. Through cohesive inclusivity strategy initiations in faculties and departments; developments in succession planning, retention and recruitment; recognition of the voluntary work of transformation committees through the inclusion of key performance areas for transformation, inclusion and diversity work in job descriptions; dialogical spaces, seminars, capacity strengthening, training and other events-based interventions, campaigns and curated art interventions; and innovations in research, teaching and learning, current realities were metamorphosised into safer and more affirming spaces.
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Setting the scene for the 2021 Transformation Report.
Introducing UCT’s transformation benchmarks.
The conclusion and recommendations of the 2021 Transformation Report.
Transformation, inclusivity, and diversity is based on continual growth and development. Listed below are the articles and poems referenced in this report, and some other useful texts to help make sense of 2021.