Introduction
The
discussion was hosted jointly by the SOTL @ UJ project and FADA/STAND. It was introduced by Brenden Gray, who said, "The idea for the seminar grew out of an interest in understanding how academics who identify themselves as “socially-engaged” think about their agency during times of student struggle and social crisis. There may exist for many teachers and researchers a strange dissonance between what is going on ‘our there’ (on the picket-line, in the news) and what is happening in the classroom, office and lecture hall." His full text is provided at the bottom of this posting. Five
academics were asked to speak for no more than five minutes each from a
personal point of view about being a socially engaged academic in the current
climate of unrest and protest.
Amira who
is originally from Sudan started by reading from the introduction of Amin
Maalouf ‘s book “Disordered World: A vison for the post 9/11 world”. She quoted
a poet from the early 20th
century who wrote these lines that were chanted during the Arab Spring
uprisings in Tunisia :
If the people one day desire
life
It is inevitable that destiny
grants it
It is inevitable that the
darkness lifts
Abul-Qacem Echebbi
Amira
likened the struggle of the UJ students to the Arab Spring uprisings – while
being aware that there may be differences in protest being driven by
socio-economic and/or political freedom issues. She reminded us that events
have far reaching significance and that we here, today have no way of knowing
the real consequence of the student protests. She especially experessed concern
that some would call “#feesmustfall or the #governmentmustfall”, quoting the
slogan of the Khartoum University students in the 80’s “A FREE UNIVERSITY OR NO
UNIVERSITY” and ironically the students were left with ‘no university’ in the
sense that standards dropped drastically and student experiences became even
more difficult. Coming from an Architecture background meant that Amira would
look at the #feesmustfall in a way that was analogous to housing. The South
African, award winning, national housing programme is a massive success in
terms of the numbers of houses delivered, yet has inadvertently reinforced
Apartheid spatial patterns, disadvantage and segregation. Idenitifable housing
for the poor, in peripheral locations, is no doubt the unintended consequence
of some noble ideals. So she stated that she is against “free houses”. This was
because a give-away house reinforces the notions of “government as provider”,
rather than “government as enabler” – a major paradigm shift in housing theory.
However she can again draw parallels in thinking about housing and education
where increased government funding is crucial – it is the manner in which that
funding is used that can lead to success or failure, spatially in the built
environment or in our educational systems.
Colin Chasi from Humanities
Colin
opened his discussion by noting that he is wary of the idea of ‘socially
engaged academics’ because he wonders what the ‘social’ is in our institutions,
it is so damanged. drawing an analogy between the language of the church and
that of the university. The university is a sacrament with its own set of
rituals. The protests are regarded as a sacrilege that has desecrated a sacred
space. He says that we teach in a strange place that is characterised by
estrangement and dislocation that speaks to colonialism /apartheid/othering.
There is a sense of the deeply wounded and damaged about where we are. He
stated that as humans we are meant to communicate and teach but in our context
we are unable to do so as even that is damaged by the violence of the past and
the silences of the present. He thus labels apartheid a crime against humanity.
He goes on to ask what is the best of our culture? What is it that we can pass
on to our students? Why is it that after twenty years of teaching and
20 000 students we still don’t know what our students want or need?
He
concluded by saying that we are dehumanised and that we come from a desecrated
relationship with the university.
Rubina Setlhare from the Faculty of Education
The
training that Psychologists in South Africa receive is a very European western
training, the basis of which is ‘be quiet and listen’. Rubina feels that that
she cannot be quiet any longer in the face of what students go through and the
violence and lack of engagement that characterises the current times. Students
deal with huge barriers and anxieties like hunger/ threats /no home and Rubina
feels that she can’t go on being the objective
psychologist who makes no comment on the lack of interest in the worker and
students’ request for open dialogue by upper university management. She is deeply troubled by the fact
that when students and workers ask for dialogue
they are met with divisive ploys to create mistrust
among the UJ community.
There is a refusal to engage and to converse. Instead security has been
increased. Students and staff are losing the dialogic intent because they are
made to feel that “this is not your space”. They are losing trust in the structures.
A deep mistrust therefore exists and she wonders how to cross the divide, more
so as the mistrust may become paranoia, with steps being put in place to
maintain the status quo. Rubina referred
to similar processes mentioned by journalist Michael Schmidt in his
book: DRINKING WITH GHOSTS.
Sadi
started off by talking about our collective inertia in the institution. She
said that her introspection led her to think of it as our collective shame. She
sometimes feels ashamed of her silence in the face of what’s happening and is
troubled by the impact of the violence: in lectures, to students and in the
institution. Why do we as academics complain but remain silent and compliant?
Her main contention though is against firstly, the form that performance
management takes at University as a response to the performativity culture,
which detracts from explicit engagement with social justice issues in the
curriculum and pedagogy. Secondly, she feels that we as academics are remiss in
that we have never engaged leadership on these issues. She says that it is
concerning how neoliberal practices are taking away power from institutions,
leaders and academics. She wants to know how we can push back against these
‘neo-liberal practices’. Why do we as academics not have nuanced ways of
dealing with the ethical, racial and language practices which all impact on our
practices? She concluded with a question for us to reflect on: Is there
something beyond our silence? Is it oppression perhaps?
Ylva Rodny-Gumede from the Faculty of Humanities
Ylva is from Sweden. She completed her Journalism
degree there. She says that it is a very politically stratified country and
mainstream journalism is similarly stratified. This made it difficult to pursue her ambition to be an
‘activist journalist’ as her job required reporting, not journalism. The re-curriculation that the university (UJ)
underwent has taken away a lot from students. Students are left with a very
limited range of subject choices especially in subjects relating to the social
sciences. This cuts back on opportunities for them to reflect and think about
community and citizen activism. The social sciences have to be reintroduced in
university and journalism for an active and reflexive citizenship to develop. Today
one can become an activist- journalist but collaboration is diminishing as
writers are individualistic within their own network spaces. Her two primary
concerns concern journalism courses and how new journalistic identities and
activism can be taught and how to become co-producers in the learning space.
Ylva’s edited talk is at the bottom of this posting.
DISCUSSION points raised by groups
We go home
to our gated communities in middle class neighbourhoods then come to UJ, put on
the ‘academic gown’and play the role of academics, instilling ‘ideas and
values’. But the students know and feel the disconnect. So how do we negotiate
the dilemma between our privilege and the students’ reality? A socially engaged educator is open to
critically examine these dislocations.
We try to
establish common ground with the students in relation to power, history and
background but we first do the disclaimer. We say ‘ask me anything’ but at the
same time say ‘ I am not the expert’. Students are inserted into our lives and
we spend so much time with them, as if we take on the role of their parents .
We’re supposed to be passing on principles and values but do we? How do we deal
with this responsibility? Silence: we are victims of silence. We know these
discussions must happen but we remain silent. Colleagues become vocal only when
they leave the University.
We are
silent because the leadership’s response is punitive or threatening. For
example budgets fall in response to perceived action but the budgets for
securitization of campus remains unlimited. Yet budgetary constraints are
imposed on everyone else.
Have we
considered the impact on the students of witnessing the trauma? Students are
demoralised. Leadership send out mixed messages. Students feel that they are
not being heard.They view the spaces within the university structure with
suspicion and distrust. Where are the sacred spaces to heal and find trust ?
Concerns
are raised about the increased performativity. Do students really learn? Do
they engage? How can we get students to engage critically in community
engagement and critical citizenship and thus claim belonging instead of merely
passing exams and seeking employment?
What do we as
academics need to do now to move the dialogue and the curriculum along?
At post
graduate level, the developmental aspect is missing. The structure of the post
grad course does not allow staff to actively engage with post grads on issues
relating to decolonisation and to be socially engaged
Academics
pontificate without understanding the context and the history and the violence.
But we fail to act. We cannot just step back and leave it to the students to
take up.
Points and issues raised
Is it not
possible for us to help students by being mediators between students and
leadership. As academics we can’t just
sit back and watch.
Is too much
time,nfunds and energy is being put in by progressive staff? Is real change
being affected? There are so many diverse opinions of what fees must fall
means.
What is the
truth /value in the events? There are many false prophets. How can we protect
it from them?
In the Arab
Spring uprisings the movements and legitimate protests of the youth were
hijacked by self- serving agendas of leaders/despots, foreign interests and
party politics. How can we protect our students from the same?
At UJ APK
campus we are caught between the old RAU broederbond style and the current UJ
leaderships ANC style. So we are in the middle of a struggle. This is not a
small current protest. It is the ongoing rebellion of the poor through strikes,
protests and upheavals. They are ongoing and will intensify. The conversations
must continue and the campuses must be drawn into the discussions. It’s
unavoidable.
In every
small way we bend to the arc of history. No movement or upheavel or protest is
in vain. We have to look at the ongoing destruction and violence and ask who is
benefitting from it. The security companies are complicit as they have jobs to
lose once it’s over.
One of the
colleagues’ words left us all deeply reflective when he concluded by saying that the current leadership is lacking in
vision and this is leading to a lost opportunity. He said that our students are
living the reality. It’s no more a movie about the rainbow nation that the
media reports on. The media creates a narrative that doesn’t reflect the
reality. For the students this is the new normal. Give credit to the students. They
force the conversation to the fore. We the adults and the academics are out of touch.
We must accept that students know. We are like the parents of the students who
took rebellion to the forefront in 1976 while the parents sat in shebeens.
A deeply
insightful session which gave much food for thought to all who attended. The
question that we are all left with is ‘quo vadis’ or where to from here. Everyone agreed that the conversation is very
important and that we need a follow up session.
Razia Mayet
FULL TEXTS
Introduction to the session by Brenden Gray
The role of socially-engaged academics and teachers in
times of student struggle
Many
of us are reflecting on the roles we are and should be playing in our teaching
and in society, at a time of student struggle and continuing social and
educational inequality. Some of us believe we have answers, but some of us are
still searching. We believe this is a good time to come together to talk, share
ideas and strategies.
Many
academics identify as socially-engaged. This means that their teaching,
research and scholarly work is to whatever extent driven by praxis, by the need
for social change whether this means dealing with inequality, poverty,
differentials in access, transformation, social justice, decolonisation and so
on. For socially-engaged academics teaching and knowledge production is
inextricably linked to society and for academics who identify as ‘socially-engaged
learning’ has material, symbolic and social effects. Their work is situated.
Education is as much a question of what is as what ought to be.
So
the question is, in times of struggle, student activism and protest what roles
do academics who self-identify as socially-engaged see themselves having? How
do these academics respond to student struggles both in terms of their own
narratives (the stories we tell ourselves about how the world works) and social
action? This links to how do we
understand the positioning and agency of the South African academic in a
post-apartheid situation. For me, student struggle and crisis broadly speaking
exposes the positions that make up the field of academia, highlighting
ideological fault lines that exist within it offering us powerful opportunities
to reflect on our politics, pedagogies and our disciplines. I certainly have seen socially-engaged
academics arguing in combative ways over questions of violence, identity
politics and structural inequality, the role of the state in our society, the
function of democracy, the purpose of education, and the salience of social
class and race in understanding the contemporary situation.
The
student struggle, certainly in 2015 around outsourcing, RhodesMustFall, FeesMustFall
and in 2016 with FeesMustFall- reloaded asks us as socially-engaged academics
to take positions, to make our positions clear and sometimes to make difficult
dispositional decisions about where we stand and what we are prepared to do in
the name of struggle.
Articles
are emerging in the popular press around the positions that academics are
taking. Some suggest that academics are “coaching students in tactics” as was
recently touted in an article in M&G on “professors of protest”. In other
cases, academics in their public intellectual work publish the much needed
information and research required by student activists to inform their opinions
around critical issues (such as fee-free education for the poor and working
class vs free universal higher education). Academics have produced reports on
the use of violence on campuses and the constitutionality of decisions made,
have petitioned management to deal differently with protest, have opposed
interdicts and suspension, have shown solidarity with student struggles by
offering material and emotional support, mediated conflict, and others have
leveraged the opportunities presented by student struggle (opportunistically or
otherwise) to reinvigorate existing transformation work in the academy, and
developed new theories to explain emerging forms of social change and social
movements, written papers and so on. In
times of student struggle academics who identify as socially-engaged are
perhaps thinking and feeling through the issues in multiple ways but do not
necessarily have the opportunity to express what are private views in an
academic and collegial context.
The
idea for the seminar grew out of an interest in understanding how academics who
identify themselves as “socially-engaged” think about their agency during times
of student struggle and social crisis. There may exist for many teachers and
researchers a strange dissonance between what is going on ‘our there’ (on the
picket-line, in the news) and what is happening in the classroom, office and
lecture hall. Do we proceed with business as usual in our teaching and
research? Do socially-engaged academics,
at times of crisis and struggle, see their academic struggles (for example
against the commodification of research, globalisation, corporatisation of the
university, managerialism, decreased state funding, and instrumentalisation)
articulated with those of students for free, public higher education system,
decolonised curricula, end to outsourcing, institutional racism and so on? This session attempts to open up this terrain
and in some senses asks what: is the habitus of the socially-engaged South
African academic.
Academic,
journalist, activist
Ylva Rodny-Gumede
In the current context of upheaval in the higher education landscape as
well as the broader social and political landscape in South Africa, it is
legitimate to ask what the role of academics should and could be. For
journalism scholars, these questions are also coupled to questions of the role
of journalism and journalism education.
The role of the news media are highly debated and highly contested all
over the world, even more so in the context of societies undergoing social and
political transitions. Equally, so the role of higher education. In the current South African context and
amidst renewed and amplified calls for addressing colonialism head on, the role
of the news media as well as higher education as institutions thought of as
both sites and agents of transformation will have to take seriously their role
as change agents.
Crucially, then is the role of journalism scholars who
straddles both spheres as academics articulating both new theory and practice with
regards to the role of journalism, and as practitioners engaged in facilitating
public discourse formation as well as contributors to such discourses in the
public realm.
The news media is thought to play a crucial role in building a new democratic society; in giving people a platform to voice diverse opinions; in informing citizens of their rights and responsibilities, and in increasing people’s knowledge about ways for them to participate in government processes. Some scholars even talk of a new age of realism where people’s need for reliable information and quality journalism on issues of society, economy and the environment is increasing rather than decreasing. This seems particularly pertinent with regards to the emergence of new media platforms, and social media in particular.
And while the news media are often considered a vital part of the public sphere, the link between media and democracy and the role that the news media is thought to play in the public sphere is not uncontested. Questions can be asked as to what information is being circulated in the public sphere characterised by an information ‘glut’ and ever more contestation over hegemonic discourses and politics of push rather than pull.
In this context, journalists will have an important role to play, not only to dissect the ‘glut’ but, also increasingly as socially engaged journalists and activists acting as counter forces to increasingly dominant and hegemonic discourses within both the news media and the academy.
However, for journalism scholars this is often thought of as somewhat of a catch 22, as whilst educating a new generation of journalists, they are beholden to thread the line between enforcing established media practices that talk less to advocacy roles shrouded in ideas of political bias, than maintaining fairness and balance in reporting, thought of as at odds with more politically stratified view points.
To overcome this, journalism scholars will have to take on a role that goes beyond educating ‘reporters’ but also thinkers and intellectuals that with integrity and bravery can marry the roles of journalists and activists. And, equally, media and journalism scholars will have to find ways of marrying and developing their own roles of academics, journalists and activists.
The idea of fostering active citizenship within the academy as well as in the journalistic profession must as such extend beyond the role we play as teachers and become part and parcel of how we look upon our own role as academics and journalists and encompass the role of activists.
This also extends to our own research. In an African context scholars have to be cognizant of both global, as well as local disciplinary debates and research agendas and how best to facilitate and foster participatory and politically engaged methodologies that extensively bridge paradigms of critical and administrative research.
It is thus time that journalism scholars reflect upon the dominant themes that have made journalism research an increasingly important element of political, social and cultural enquiry. This to set out a research agenda for the discipline that not only talk to the local or African context but increasingly to what African media and communications research contributes to the growth of the discipline as a whole and what the role of journalism scholars should be in this context as academics, journalists and activists.
The news media is thought to play a crucial role in building a new democratic society; in giving people a platform to voice diverse opinions; in informing citizens of their rights and responsibilities, and in increasing people’s knowledge about ways for them to participate in government processes. Some scholars even talk of a new age of realism where people’s need for reliable information and quality journalism on issues of society, economy and the environment is increasing rather than decreasing. This seems particularly pertinent with regards to the emergence of new media platforms, and social media in particular.
And while the news media are often considered a vital part of the public sphere, the link between media and democracy and the role that the news media is thought to play in the public sphere is not uncontested. Questions can be asked as to what information is being circulated in the public sphere characterised by an information ‘glut’ and ever more contestation over hegemonic discourses and politics of push rather than pull.
In this context, journalists will have an important role to play, not only to dissect the ‘glut’ but, also increasingly as socially engaged journalists and activists acting as counter forces to increasingly dominant and hegemonic discourses within both the news media and the academy.
However, for journalism scholars this is often thought of as somewhat of a catch 22, as whilst educating a new generation of journalists, they are beholden to thread the line between enforcing established media practices that talk less to advocacy roles shrouded in ideas of political bias, than maintaining fairness and balance in reporting, thought of as at odds with more politically stratified view points.
To overcome this, journalism scholars will have to take on a role that goes beyond educating ‘reporters’ but also thinkers and intellectuals that with integrity and bravery can marry the roles of journalists and activists. And, equally, media and journalism scholars will have to find ways of marrying and developing their own roles of academics, journalists and activists.
The idea of fostering active citizenship within the academy as well as in the journalistic profession must as such extend beyond the role we play as teachers and become part and parcel of how we look upon our own role as academics and journalists and encompass the role of activists.
This also extends to our own research. In an African context scholars have to be cognizant of both global, as well as local disciplinary debates and research agendas and how best to facilitate and foster participatory and politically engaged methodologies that extensively bridge paradigms of critical and administrative research.
It is thus time that journalism scholars reflect upon the dominant themes that have made journalism research an increasingly important element of political, social and cultural enquiry. This to set out a research agenda for the discipline that not only talk to the local or African context but increasingly to what African media and communications research contributes to the growth of the discipline as a whole and what the role of journalism scholars should be in this context as academics, journalists and activists.
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