Contrapuntal curriculum and epistemic transformation in South African universities

Transformation in Higher Education

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Contrapuntal curriculum and epistemic transformation in South African universities
 
Creator Fataar, Aslam
 
Subject Higher Education Curriulum curriculum transformation; epistemic justice, contrapuntal reading; indigenous and enslaved knowledge; post-apartheid higher education
Description This article calls for a fundamental reconstitution of the South African university curriculum through a contrapuntal lens that centres epistemic justice. Drawing on Edward Said’s concepts of worldliness and contrapuntal reading, it argues that dominant knowledge systems must be brought into critical and sustained dialogue with the subjugated epistemologies they have historically excluded. Rather than conceiving the curriculum as a neutral repository of inherited content, the article positions it as a site of ongoing epistemic contestation and structural exclusion. It revisits the Mafeje, Makgoba, and Mamdani affairs as key historical flashpoints that exposed the university’s deep-seated resistance to African and Global South intellectual traditions, often under the guise of safeguarding academic preparedness and institutional standards. The analysis then turns to the post-apartheid shift towards skills-based and managerialist curriculum models. While framed as inclusive and pragmatic, these models have narrowed the curriculum’s scope, sidelining historical critique, ethical reflection, and epistemic diversity in favour of throughput, market readiness, and technical proficiency. In response, the article then explores the marginalised intellectual and cultural contributions of enslaved and indigenous communities at the Cape. Their vernacular literacies, oral traditions, and relational knowledge practices are presented as generative resources for curriculum renewal. The article concludes by proposing five guiding principles: epistemic redistribution, plural reasoning, relational pedagogy, problem-centred learning, and assessment for justice. Together, these offer a framework for reimagining the university as a democratic and socially responsive space of inclusive knowledge making.Contribution: The article advances a contrapuntal curriculum framework that reconstitutes South African university knowledge structures through historical critique and epistemic justice.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor N/A
Date 2025-10-16
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — Conceptual article
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/the.v10i0.651
 
Source Transformation in Higher Education; Vol 10 (2025); 10 pages 2519-5638 2415-0991
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/651/999 https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/651/1000 https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/651/1001 https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/651/1002
 
Coverage South Africa Historical coverage N/A
Rights Copyright (c) 2025 Aslam Fataar https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
ADVERTISEMENT