EDS341 Decolonial Theory

Credits (ECTS):5

Course responsible:Esben Leifsen

Campus / Online:Taught campus Ås

Teaching language:Engelsk

Limits of class size:25

Course frequency:Every second year, next time given January 2025

Nominal workload:

Organised activities: 32 hours of lectures, discussions in class and smaller groups, 12 hours of student presentations, and 2 hours guidance in written assignments. Total: 44 hours.

Individual studies and preparations: 81 hours.

Total: 125 hours.

Teaching and exam period:January block.

About this course

In this course we explore positions in academic writing associated with the South, with First Nations, and indigenous, subaltern, feminist and more-than-human scholarship. We introduce students to research that attempts to decolonize theory by challenging, decentring and destabilizing universal explanations of human reality, and by creating awareness about other forms of knowing and being. Much of the de-colonial writing we consider respond critically to different kinds of colonial legacies, processes of invisibilization and marginalization, the pressure from extractive economies, environmental damage, and exclusionary politics of recognition.

EDS 341 introduces the students to the idea of situated knowledge. Students will be asked to ponder on the power of universal knowledge production. What are the implications of universal claims to knowledge with the capacity to explain the world as it is, while other kinds of knowledge are deemed partial and local? We read and discuss a series of texts written from different ‘world positions’ and based on different post-, de-, anti- and settler colonial perspectives that address issues of elimination, marginalization, recognition, history writing, epistemological and ontological pluralism, and more-than-human relationality. The aim is not to challenge the students to dismiss any academic traditions, but to increase awareness about knowledge practices’ limited epistemological and ontological reach. The students are encouraged to think through the implications of increasing awareness of this kind.

Learning outcome

  • Students will gain a good understanding of perspectives within the post-development literature that questions universal claims to knowledge about the human condition, human improvement and the world order.
  • Students will be familiar with central theoretical debates on decolonization, pluralism and human-non-human interrelations.
  • Students will be able to identify power mechanisms in dominant knowledge production and use this insight to capture the meaning and purpose of decolonial critique.
  • Students will through interactive learning be able to reflect on the implications of applying situated knowledge as a research strategy.
  • This is a 5 credits January block course with an intensive learning approach based on the reading of texts, lectures and brief introductions by the educators and the students, and an emphasis on discussion and interactive learning in the classroom and in smaller groups. Short writing exercises, reflection circles, and a final presentation form part of the organized learning activities. Visual media will be used as an additional source to stimulate reflection and discussions. Contributions fromguest lecturers.
  • Educators will convey course content and support students in the learning process.They will give feed-back to the class in plenary sessions and discussions in smaller groups, and to groups and individual students working on assignments. Outside class hours, educators can be contacted by e-mail or by appointment.
  • Portfolio assessment

    The students are expected to attend all days of teaching and must attend at least 2/3 of the time in order to pass.

    The course has an interactive learning approach and students will be asked to prepare short presentations of texts and themes.

    The students will be given two short writing assignments, which they should respond to based on the reading of course literature and discussions in class. They will receive written and/or oral feedback to these assignments.

    The final presentation and oral exam: The students can prepare for the presentation individually or in groups, and are free to choose the form of the presentation (e.g. a digital story, a podcast, an oral presentation with or without interactive elements, or other modes). An external examiner will be present under the final presentations and take part in the oral examination.

    Evaluation form: pass / fail.



    Combined assessment Grading: Passed / Not Passed
  • An external examiner will participate in the final oral exam.
  • 10 days of structured education
  • M-GDS, M-IES, M-IR and M-GLA. Other interested students must contact the course responsible.
  • GSK