T-D-STS COVID-19 PROJECT: Angela Okune, COLLABORATING RESEARCHER
Digital collection describing Angela Okune as a collaborating researcher in the Transnational Disaster STS COVID-19 Project.
Digital collection describing Angela Okune as a collaborating researcher in the Transnational Disaster STS COVID-19 Project.
I've been organizing and working with the Research Data KE Working Group. We have been collecting relevant links, articles and data in this essay. Some members of our group are now going deeper into thematic areas such as looking at gender and its intersection with COVID-19 in Kenya. We have a monthly call on the second Thursday of every month. We also have a WhatsApp chat group to exchange links and articles. We are open to new members, sign up here. You can find an archive of all of our calls and notes here.
This essay supports an upcoming discussion of how COVID-19 is unfolding in Kenya and a broader discussion about the framing of "place" within the Transnational STS COVID-19 project.
This digital collection supports tutorial sessions for learning to use PECE.
Collection focused on ways COVID-19 is unfolding in different places.
The training of and role for the (humanist?) intellectual in the world seems to be a relevant take-away point of discussion from postcolonial theory. I have been noticing a proliferation of thought pieces and various genres of writing by engaged scholars in this COVID-19 moment. While indeed there is lots to think and write about, the Late Industrial times we are in are also marked by a heavy saturation of information. Rather than feeling enlightening and motivated by the increased proliferation of opinions on COVID-19, I find it has the opposite effect. What other (new) forms of knowledge, processes for knowledge making, and ways of engaging in the world (not to mention education for critical consciousness) are needed in this moment? Perhaps unsurprisingly, I find the value and strength of new research collectives like this one to be rich spaces from which to start thinking about this question.
Ahmed describes the importance of a "humanist education" that trains the “ethical reflex” to open one up to forms of consciousness fundamentally different from one’s own. He notes that such openness eventually requires one to “rebel” against one’s training itself (developing critical consciousness?).
Ahmed also writes about the relationship where the intellectual refuses to speak for the subaltern--where the intellectual enters into a relationship with something foreign to him about which he will absolutely refuse ever to produce authoritative knowledge. "The point of the relationship is, in fact, "to question the grounds of knowledge itself."
AO: This emerged as a to-do from a design group call on May 1, 2020 - a list of possible topics that would benefit from having a comparative foci as a resource for people.
This text artifact describes the Transnational STS COVID-19 Project Design Group.
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