dc.description.abstract |
This paper will examine the notion of "critical border thinking" and its significance for
postcolonial societies such as Sri Lanka. Further, it will explore the role of 'languaging' in
relation to "critical border thinking", paying attention to the Sri Lankan context.
Borders are commonly regarded as spatial or geographic boundaries that indicate
territorial, geopolitical divisions. Borders can also signify "subjective (e.g. cultural) and
epistemic" divisions and, "contrary to frontiers, the very concept of 'border' implies the
existence of people, languages, religions and knowledge on both sides." Despite the
arbitrary, contested and constructed nature of borders, these are made to signal an
important difference between the 'insiders'/'outsiders' and 'us'/'them'. In terms of
epistemology, such borders function to validate certain forms of knowledge, while
invalidating and delegitimizing others.
Santos (2007) claims that 'abyssal cartography' that consists of a system of visible (this
side of the line) and invisible (other side of the line) distinctions premised on colonial
difference is constitutive of modern knowledge (p.6). While for the Western nations,
imperialism led to a rearticulation of epistemic frontiers, for many colonized nations, it
registered a moment of 'epistemic violence' and/or devaluation of native knowledges.
Hence, critical border thinking (or border epistemology) is a politico-epistemological
project that undertakes to re-write "geographic frontiers, imperial/colonial subjectivities
and territorial epistemologies" from the borders and, thus, it is a 'de-colonial project'. It
"emerged from and as a response to the violence (frontiers) of imperial/territorial
epistemology and the rhetoric of modernity (globalization) of salvation that continues to
be implemented on the assumption of the inferiority or devilish intentions of the Other
and, therefore, continues to justify oppression and exploitation, as well as eradication of
the difference" (Mignolo & Tlostanova, 2006, p. 206). While examining the significance
of the above concept, this paper will argue that far from being a unitary space, the space of
border thinking itself is highly fraught with dissidence, tensions and ambivalences. This is
specially so with the emeregence of nation states and politics of ethnonationalism. For,
epistemology came to be entwined with national ideologies that presuppose the purity of
race, as well as language.
Language occupies a pivotal place in the concept of border epistemology. Epistemology is
interwoven into language and it constructs and shapes our understanding of the world.
Also, it is closely linked with communal and geopolitical formations (Mignolo and
Tlostanova, 2006, p. 207). While prestige is accorded to languages such as English and
French and the knowledge produced therein, the 'Oriental' languages (i.e. Sanskrit) and
epistemology were/are denied such recognition. The emphasis placed on national
languages in the decolonizing process has intitiated a different set of politico-ideological
issues. Importantly, 'critical border thinking' involves 'languaging' and 'bilanguaging' and it
"opens up to a postnational imaginary" (Mignolo, 2000, p. 253). This paper will highlight
the significance of languaging and bilanguaging in the Sri Lankan context in relation to
the concept of 'border thinking'. |
|