Using Chinese, Middle Eastern and First Nations Australian philosophies about time and history to generate socially just doctoral education in contemporary times

Contested notions about time and history continue to circulate in transcultural and First Nations doctoral education without being addressed. This lack of awareness of the impact of history on transcultural and First Nations doctoral candidates diminishes opportunities to create socially just doctor...

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Main Authors: Manathunga, Catherine, Singh, Michael, Qu, Jing, Bunda, Tracey
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Australian Association for Research in Education 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://app.oxfordabstracts.com/events/998/program-app/submission/133288
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spelling ftunivscoast:usc:30516 2023-05-15T16:14:20+02:00 Using Chinese, Middle Eastern and First Nations Australian philosophies about time and history to generate socially just doctoral education in contemporary times Manathunga, Catherine Singh, Michael Qu, Jing Bunda, Tracey 2019 https://app.oxfordabstracts.com/events/998/program-app/submission/133288 eng eng Australian Association for Research in Education usc:30516 FoR 1303 (Specialist Studies in Education) Conference Presentation 2019 ftunivscoast 2020-01-20T23:25:33Z Contested notions about time and history continue to circulate in transcultural and First Nations doctoral education without being addressed. This lack of awareness of the impact of history on transcultural and First Nations doctoral candidates diminishes opportunities to create socially just doctoral education and genuine access, engagement and equity in doctoral education for migrant, refugee, international and First Nations peoples. The absence of historical understandings of knowledge exchange has the effect of privileging Northern knowledge (Connell, 2007) and diminishes understandings the complex operations of power evident in doctoral education. Even though there has been a growing body of doctoral transcultural and First Nations knowledge production (eg. Devos and Somerville, 2012; Grant and McKinley, 2011, Qi, 2015; Bunda, 2014), much of this work remains on the margins of disciplines. This translates not only into the marginal positioning allocated to transcultural and First Nations knowledge systems but also into demoralisation in doctoral education (Manathunga, 2014; Soong et al., 2015). Some theorists have been seeking to create opportunities for doctoral candidates to [re]construct knowledge relevant to the cultural histories of First Nations and transcultural communities by drawing upon the French philosopher Rancière’s ideas about the ignorant schoolmaster (Singh, 2009; Engels-Schwarzpaul, 2015a) and the role of dissensus (Engels-Schwarzpaul, 2015b; Rizvi, 2011; Chen, 2015). However, these approaches draw principally on Western philosophies. This paper investigates Chinese, Middle Eastern and Aboriginal First Nations’ philosophies about time and history to reframe transcultural doctoral education. We explore recent debates about Chinese historical thinking and understandings of time (Wang, 2007; Huang, 2007); Ibn Khaldun’s Islamic or Arabic (Khaldun, translated 1969) philosophy of history and Australian First Nations philosophies about time as the ‘every when’ (Moreton, 2006) to provide transcultural theoretical resources that have the potential to help contemporary First Nations and transcultural doctoral candidates recognise ways that they can act as historical agents of intercultural knowledge exchange and transform transnational doctoral education. Drawing on macro historical approaches (Harding, 2011; Belting, 2011), we argue that contemporary transcultural doctoral candidates can act as intellectual agents of transcultural interaction, learning from history to use their languages and cultural knowledges to influence elements of the educational culture in Western/Northern Anglophone universities. History provides relevant evidence for doctoral research candidates to position themselves as agents of transcultural interaction, capable of mobilising educational materials and understandings of time from their own intellectual cultures to transformation of the culture of transnational education. Conference Object First Nations University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia: COAST Research Database Harding ENVELOPE(75.033,75.033,-72.900,-72.900) Moreton ENVELOPE(-46.033,-46.033,-60.616,-60.616) Somerville ENVELOPE(-64.307,-64.307,-65.376,-65.376)
institution Open Polar
collection University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia: COAST Research Database
op_collection_id ftunivscoast
language English
topic FoR 1303 (Specialist Studies in Education)
spellingShingle FoR 1303 (Specialist Studies in Education)
Manathunga, Catherine
Singh, Michael
Qu, Jing
Bunda, Tracey
Using Chinese, Middle Eastern and First Nations Australian philosophies about time and history to generate socially just doctoral education in contemporary times
topic_facet FoR 1303 (Specialist Studies in Education)
description Contested notions about time and history continue to circulate in transcultural and First Nations doctoral education without being addressed. This lack of awareness of the impact of history on transcultural and First Nations doctoral candidates diminishes opportunities to create socially just doctoral education and genuine access, engagement and equity in doctoral education for migrant, refugee, international and First Nations peoples. The absence of historical understandings of knowledge exchange has the effect of privileging Northern knowledge (Connell, 2007) and diminishes understandings the complex operations of power evident in doctoral education. Even though there has been a growing body of doctoral transcultural and First Nations knowledge production (eg. Devos and Somerville, 2012; Grant and McKinley, 2011, Qi, 2015; Bunda, 2014), much of this work remains on the margins of disciplines. This translates not only into the marginal positioning allocated to transcultural and First Nations knowledge systems but also into demoralisation in doctoral education (Manathunga, 2014; Soong et al., 2015). Some theorists have been seeking to create opportunities for doctoral candidates to [re]construct knowledge relevant to the cultural histories of First Nations and transcultural communities by drawing upon the French philosopher Rancière’s ideas about the ignorant schoolmaster (Singh, 2009; Engels-Schwarzpaul, 2015a) and the role of dissensus (Engels-Schwarzpaul, 2015b; Rizvi, 2011; Chen, 2015). However, these approaches draw principally on Western philosophies. This paper investigates Chinese, Middle Eastern and Aboriginal First Nations’ philosophies about time and history to reframe transcultural doctoral education. We explore recent debates about Chinese historical thinking and understandings of time (Wang, 2007; Huang, 2007); Ibn Khaldun’s Islamic or Arabic (Khaldun, translated 1969) philosophy of history and Australian First Nations philosophies about time as the ‘every when’ (Moreton, 2006) to provide transcultural theoretical resources that have the potential to help contemporary First Nations and transcultural doctoral candidates recognise ways that they can act as historical agents of intercultural knowledge exchange and transform transnational doctoral education. Drawing on macro historical approaches (Harding, 2011; Belting, 2011), we argue that contemporary transcultural doctoral candidates can act as intellectual agents of transcultural interaction, learning from history to use their languages and cultural knowledges to influence elements of the educational culture in Western/Northern Anglophone universities. History provides relevant evidence for doctoral research candidates to position themselves as agents of transcultural interaction, capable of mobilising educational materials and understandings of time from their own intellectual cultures to transformation of the culture of transnational education.
format Conference Object
author Manathunga, Catherine
Singh, Michael
Qu, Jing
Bunda, Tracey
author_facet Manathunga, Catherine
Singh, Michael
Qu, Jing
Bunda, Tracey
author_sort Manathunga, Catherine
title Using Chinese, Middle Eastern and First Nations Australian philosophies about time and history to generate socially just doctoral education in contemporary times
title_short Using Chinese, Middle Eastern and First Nations Australian philosophies about time and history to generate socially just doctoral education in contemporary times
title_full Using Chinese, Middle Eastern and First Nations Australian philosophies about time and history to generate socially just doctoral education in contemporary times
title_fullStr Using Chinese, Middle Eastern and First Nations Australian philosophies about time and history to generate socially just doctoral education in contemporary times
title_full_unstemmed Using Chinese, Middle Eastern and First Nations Australian philosophies about time and history to generate socially just doctoral education in contemporary times
title_sort using chinese, middle eastern and first nations australian philosophies about time and history to generate socially just doctoral education in contemporary times
publisher Australian Association for Research in Education
publishDate 2019
url https://app.oxfordabstracts.com/events/998/program-app/submission/133288
long_lat ENVELOPE(75.033,75.033,-72.900,-72.900)
ENVELOPE(-46.033,-46.033,-60.616,-60.616)
ENVELOPE(-64.307,-64.307,-65.376,-65.376)
geographic Harding
Moreton
Somerville
geographic_facet Harding
Moreton
Somerville
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation usc:30516
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