Transplanting the Fairy Tale: An Afrocentric Perspective

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/1947-9417/4485

Keywords:

decolonisation, Afrikology, fairy tales, transculturation

Abstract

In the light of #FeesMustFall, decolonisation has come to the fore in the South African higher education landscape. Decolonisation proposes the overthrow of entrenched European power relations in higher education and the study of fairy tales within a pre-service teaching degree in a university English curriculum provides an ideal opportunity for lecturers to challenge this dominance. All too often, cultural fairy tales are analysed and studied within the European trajectory of the structuralist/formalist classification tradition, often rendering the tale to an oversimplified outline which has been reduced to archetypes, motifs and memes which are universalised across cultures and texts. Epistemic awareness of Afrikology has been suggested as a way of facilitating the inclusion of Afrocentric thinking in the English curriculum and giving pre-service teachers a voice in their own learning. The purpose of this paper is to track the creation of context-relevant cultural capital in the writing of fairy tales. An analysis of the results shows that deep critical engagement with the cultural metaphors presented in fairy tales leads to the development of Afrocentric cultural capital that is highly contextualised and rooted in the language and customs of the cultural identity of the writers who transcoded the fairy tales.

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Author Biography

Candice Livingston, Cape Peninsula Universtiy of Technology

Dr Candice Livingston is a senior lecturer and the Research co-ordinator at the Faculty of Education at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology where she is involved with numerous Community engagement projects. She is a member of the Faculty Research and Ethics Committees. Her research interests include teaching with technology, cultural competency and the study of fairy-tales. Dr Livingston has a keen interest in ‘teaching with technology’ and has been part of CPUT’s ‘Teaching with Technology’ programme where she has presented workshops and mentors other lecturers in the use of technology to improve their teaching.

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Published

2018-12-11

How to Cite

Livingston, Candice. 2018. “Transplanting the Fairy Tale: An Afrocentric Perspective”. Education As Change 22 (3):17 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/1947-9417/4485.

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Section

Articles
Received 2018-07-01
Accepted 2018-11-22
Published 2018-12-11