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Acta Academica

On-line version ISSN 2415-0479
Print version ISSN 0587-2405

Abstract

HLATSHWAYO, Mlamuli Nkosingphile. Being Black in South African higher education: An intersectional insight. Acta acad. (Bloemfontein, Online) [online]. 2020, vol.52, n.2, pp.163-180. ISSN 2415-0479.  http://dx.doi.org/10.18820/24150479/aa52i2/9.

South African higher education continues to struggle to make sense of the post 2015-2016 student movements in calling for institutional transformation and decolonisation of the academy (Heleta 2016; Mbembe 2016; Naicker 2015). In this article, I contribute to the emerging body of work that looks at transformation and decolonisation in South African higher education. I draw from the American feminist scholar Kimberlé Crenshaw's theoretical tools of intersectionality and Nat Nakasa's and, more recently, Siseko Kumalo's (2018) conceptual notion of the "natives of nowhere" to do two things. I firstly use the theoretical tools to map the fragmented and differentiated nature of South African higher education, and the implications this has for decoloniality to emerge. Secondly, I trace the intersectional struggles that Black students and progressive Black academics continue to face in the South African academy, and the discursive struggles operating at different levels, ranging from alienation; marginality; epistemic violence in the academy; institutional culture(s); an alienating and marginalising curricula; and others, that all intersectionally align to produce the postcolonial "natives of nowhere" in the South African academy.

Keywords : South African higher education; intersect ionality; natives of nowhere; decolonisation; epistemic violence.

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