6 ECTS credits
150 h study time
Offer 2 with catalog number 4000845FNR for all students in the 2nd semester at a (F) Master - specialised level.
Building on efforts to "decolonise" the academic curriculum, this course seeks to present different "decolonial", "post-colonial" and/or "decentralised" visions of history. Throughout the semester we will read, study and discuss together historians, concepts, intellectual movements that have had a significant impact on historical science. The course has two aims. First, to make students reflect on the existence of Eurocentric and historicist biases in the historiography. Secondly, to make students critically approach the implicit biases of history writing. Students are challenged to consider the relevance of the various theories and theses studied in the light of their own knowledge and research experiences. The course takes on the form of a literature seminar.
Students are provided with a reader, a collection of key texts related to the postcolonial critique of historiography.
Each lesson is organised around a theme, and two texts from the reader are linked to each theme. For each lesson, students are asked to critically read and analyse these two texts. Each week, a series of questions will be discussed together.
During the meetings, the historical and intellectual contexts of the studied theme, author and/or context are presented. Afterwards, the two texts are summarised and discussed (in terms of key concepts, methodology, relevance, contribution). To conclude, a collective debate around the previously sent questions is organised.
The student must understand at least 6 of the following key concepts of postcolonial approaches:
The student must show that he/she can critically analyse a theoretical scientific text. She/he must:
The student must show that she/he can apply concepts and theories to her/his own research in a critical way (see evaluation below).
The student must demonstrate self-reflectivity. She/he must reflect on the influence of her/his social situation on the determination and approach of her/his research objects.
The final grade is composed based on the following categories:
LEC Teamwork determines 20% of the final mark.
LEC Paper determines 60% of the final mark.
LEC Report determines 20% of the final mark.
Within the LEC Teamwork category, the following assignments need to be completed:
Within the LEC Paper category, the following assignments need to be completed:
Within the LEC Report category, the following assignments need to be completed:
There is no exam fort his course: students are evaluated on the basis of various tasks performed during the semester:
- Task one: students must submit six one pagers over the course of the semester. These short essays are reflections on six freely chosen texts from the reader. They must contain the following elements: 1° a summary of the core argument and methodology used by the author. 2° a reflection on the advantages and disadvantages of a critical use of the theoretical/conceptual apparatus of the text linked to a personal research experience.
-Task two: students have to present in groups two texts related to a module. Each group has to make and present a synthesis of each text, and organize a discussion about the texts in and with the class.
-Task three: at the end of the academic year each student has to write a 2000 to 3500 word assignment. The assignment is a critical application of at least one of the studied concepts/theories to a personal research experience (workcollege thesis, and bachelor or master thesis).
In the assignment, the student has to make a critical use of the studied decolonial research agenda, in two connected ways. Firstly, the student must demonstrate self-reflectivity. For this they have to apply several questions to their chosen research experience:
Secondly, the student must demonstrate a critical approach to at least one postcolonial concept/theory. He/she should try to answer the following questions:
This offer is part of the following study plans:
Master of Adult Education: Profile Cultural Studies (only offered in Dutch)
Master of Adult Education: Profile Social Studies (only offered in Dutch)
Master of History: default (only offered in Dutch)
Master of Communication Studies: Media and Society (only offered in Dutch)
Master of Teaching in Arts and Humanities: History (only offered in Dutch)
Master of Teaching in Arts and Humanities: Art History and Heritage Studies (only offered in Dutch)
Master of Teaching in Arts and Humanities: Philosophy (only offered in Dutch)
Master of Teaching in Arts and Humanities: Ethics and Humanism (only offered in Dutch)
Master of Teaching in Behavioural Sciences: agogische wetenschappen (120 ECTS, Etterbeek) (only offered in Dutch)