Ubuntu: A Regenerative Philosophy for Rupturing Racist Colonial Stories of Dispossession

Let me share with you Ubuntu oralities. These stories will connect us in a familial dialogue about how we can and are regenerating beyond neo colonialism by using Ubuntu. Ubuntu is a philosophical and ethical system of thought, from which definitions of humanness, togetherness and social politics of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mucina, Devi Dee
Other Authors: Wane, Njoki
Language:en_ca
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/29931
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spelling ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-299312013-04-19T19:56:12ZUbuntu: A Regenerative Philosophy for Rupturing Racist Colonial Stories of DispossessionMucina, Devi DeeOralityAfrican PhilosophyUbuntuBlacknessStorytellingNarrative032503310422Let me share with you Ubuntu oralities. These stories will connect us in a familial dialogue about how we can and are regenerating beyond neo colonialism by using Ubuntu. Ubuntu is a philosophical and ethical system of thought, from which definitions of humanness, togetherness and social politics of difference arise. Ubuntu can also be viewed as a complex worldview that holds in tension the contradictions of trying to highlight our uniqueness as human beings among other human beings. My interpretation of our Indigenous Ubuntu knowledge communicates how my understanding of Ubuntu is influenced by my Maseko Ngoni and Shona ethnic identities. Another influence of my understanding of our Ubuntu worldview comes from the African languages of my familial communities which are the main tools that I draw on for accessing our shared meaning and creating new shared meaning. The geopolitical experience of being Black in Africa and then leaving Africa for the West also has influenced my understanding of Ubuntu. These are my strengths and limitations in engaging Ubuntu. I give you this information because it is not my aim to create a false dichotomy about Blackness; rather, it is my aim to enter our global contemporary Black academic discourse with another form of remembering Blackness. My remembering is grounded in my own experience which has found constancy through Ubuntu languages and other social symbolic expressions. This cultural transmission process has allowed knowledge from my ancestors to cascade down to me. I believe that by sharing our social stories we build collective confidence to engage and challenge each other with respectful curiosity and, above all, with love. Love is the expression of relational care for our interconnectedness, which is the basis for researching our truths in our shared humanity. Ubuntuness has many ways of transmitting knowledge. This being said, for this work I will focus on how we can share our fragmented memories through our stories of family, community and nationhood, as a way of better understanding our Ubuntuness. This is the process of love creating possibilities beyond pain, isolation, abandonment and hate.Wane, Njoki2011-062011-09-01T01:12:00ZNO_RESTRICTION2011-09-01T01:12:00Z2011-08-31Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/29931en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Orality
African Philosophy
Ubuntu
Blackness
Storytelling
Narrative
0325
0331
0422
spellingShingle Orality
African Philosophy
Ubuntu
Blackness
Storytelling
Narrative
0325
0331
0422
Mucina, Devi Dee
Ubuntu: A Regenerative Philosophy for Rupturing Racist Colonial Stories of Dispossession
description Let me share with you Ubuntu oralities. These stories will connect us in a familial dialogue about how we can and are regenerating beyond neo colonialism by using Ubuntu. Ubuntu is a philosophical and ethical system of thought, from which definitions of humanness, togetherness and social politics of difference arise. Ubuntu can also be viewed as a complex worldview that holds in tension the contradictions of trying to highlight our uniqueness as human beings among other human beings. My interpretation of our Indigenous Ubuntu knowledge communicates how my understanding of Ubuntu is influenced by my Maseko Ngoni and Shona ethnic identities. Another influence of my understanding of our Ubuntu worldview comes from the African languages of my familial communities which are the main tools that I draw on for accessing our shared meaning and creating new shared meaning. The geopolitical experience of being Black in Africa and then leaving Africa for the West also has influenced my understanding of Ubuntu. These are my strengths and limitations in engaging Ubuntu. I give you this information because it is not my aim to create a false dichotomy about Blackness; rather, it is my aim to enter our global contemporary Black academic discourse with another form of remembering Blackness. My remembering is grounded in my own experience which has found constancy through Ubuntu languages and other social symbolic expressions. This cultural transmission process has allowed knowledge from my ancestors to cascade down to me. I believe that by sharing our social stories we build collective confidence to engage and challenge each other with respectful curiosity and, above all, with love. Love is the expression of relational care for our interconnectedness, which is the basis for researching our truths in our shared humanity. Ubuntuness has many ways of transmitting knowledge. This being said, for this work I will focus on how we can share our fragmented memories through our stories of family, community and nationhood, as a way of better understanding our Ubuntuness. This is the process of love creating possibilities beyond pain, isolation, abandonment and hate.
author2 Wane, Njoki
author_facet Wane, Njoki
Mucina, Devi Dee
author Mucina, Devi Dee
author_sort Mucina, Devi Dee
title Ubuntu: A Regenerative Philosophy for Rupturing Racist Colonial Stories of Dispossession
title_short Ubuntu: A Regenerative Philosophy for Rupturing Racist Colonial Stories of Dispossession
title_full Ubuntu: A Regenerative Philosophy for Rupturing Racist Colonial Stories of Dispossession
title_fullStr Ubuntu: A Regenerative Philosophy for Rupturing Racist Colonial Stories of Dispossession
title_full_unstemmed Ubuntu: A Regenerative Philosophy for Rupturing Racist Colonial Stories of Dispossession
title_sort ubuntu: a regenerative philosophy for rupturing racist colonial stories of dispossession
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/29931
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