Browsing by Author "Jonker, Francois"
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Item Choreographic cartographies with-in learning: towards response-ability in higher education pedagogy(Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in the South, 2023) Jonker, FrancoisIn this article, I seek to engage the liberatory impetus of critical pedagogies through an attentiveness to body-space-time so as to enrich the former with the notion of response-ability. Several learning activities are engaged within the context of a foundation year classroom of an Art School, to open up conceptions of the experiential nature of learning events and the ethico-onto-epistemological questions that emerge when foregrounding response-ability as a condition for learning-becoming. I have particular interest in notions of subjectivity, agency and affect, questioning how a new materialist reading of these concepts might serve to challenge representationalist conceptions of higher learning. I commence with a proposition: engage learning as an experience — through the processual potentialities of its in-act and prompt myself by drawing attention to the performativity of body-space-time cartographies and choreographies.Item Towards response-able arts-based practices in higher education(University of the Western Cape, 2024) Jonker, Francois; Bozalek, VivienneThis dissertation aims to contribute to the proliferation of scholarship concerned with the postphilosophical1 queering of normative hegemonies within higher education, by foregrounding a methodological interest in ‘how else’ to do higher education research, pedagogy and assessment. Creatively investigating how to do academia differently, this thesis challenges the teleological conception of learning as a pre-figured logical progression of predetermined outcomes, the centring of the bounded individual as the unitary subject of learning, as well as the commonplace reliance on representationalist logics that grant language the ability to capture meaning in its expansive fullness. These critical educational concerns are considered from the situated position in a private higher education institution, the Cape Town Creative Academy (CTCA), located in Cape Town, South Africa. The CTCA specialises in the delivery of bachelor’s and postgraduate qualifications within contemporary art and various design disciplines. This dissertation responds to the widespread concern over the neoliberal reform of universities, where the private higher education sector figures as the pinnacle entrepreneurial face of capitalised education. The South African private art and design school sector is a highly competitive market of (mostly) homologous qualification offerings. As such, the urgency for institutional differentiation results in the promotion of discourses of excellence—prioritising outcomes over process, individual achievement over communal learning, and marketable skills over critical praxis.