“Education Before Liberation” became the mantra of the struggle against apartheid oppression in South Africa. Apartheid policies predestined the Black majority to servitude and dehumanization. The advent of democracy heralded a plethora of transformative curriculum policies with the express intent to counter the destiny that the Apartheid regime had envisioned for the Black majority. The current curriculum canon which is premised on the tenets of critical pedagogy espouses the ideals of social justice and democracy, and embodies the intent to educate for liberation and social transformation. This article addresses the central question: How do the material tensions of enacting critical pedagogical tenets manifest in post-apartheid South African education through the narratives of educators as transformative intellectuals? In responding to this enquiry, in this article I will (a) sketch an analysis of teachers’ identities as enshrined in retrospective and current curriculum policies; and (b) draw on data from a qualitative study conducted at schools in Johannesburg, South Africa, to explore educators’ personal and professional narratives of pleasure and pain as they persevere in being transformative intellectuals within disadvantaged school communities in an emerging democracy. This article argues that if the ideals of democracy is central to the curriculum for students, then the education system needs to ensure that the personal and professional wellbeing of teachers should form an integral part of the human rights discourse.

Amsterdam, C. (2006). Adequacy in the South African context: A concept analysis. Perspectives in Education, 24(2), 25-34.
Google Scholar | ISI
Apple, M. W. (2007). Late to class: Social class and schooling in the new economy. New York: State University of New York Press.
Google Scholar
Beall, J., Crankshaw, O., Parnell, S. (Eds.). (2002). Uniting a divided city: Governance and social exclusion in Johannesburg. London, England: Earthscan.
Google Scholar
Brantlinger, E. (2010). Response to Adam Howard and Mark Tappan toward emancipated identities and improved world circumstances. In Malewski, E. (Ed.), Curriculum studies handbook: The next moment. (pp. 335-338). New York, NY: Routledge.
Google Scholar
Carrim, N. (2001). From teachers to educators: Homogenising tendencies in contemporary South African educational reforms. International Journal of Educational Development, 21, 45-52.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Chisholm, L. (2003, September 9-11). The politics of curriculum review and revision in South Africa. Paper presented at the Oxford International Conference on Education and Development at the Session on Culture, Context and the Quality of Education. Oxford: London.
Google Scholar
Collay, M. (2010). Retracing the roots of teacher activism in urban schools. Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 5, 221-233.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals
Darder, A. (1997). Creating the conditions for cultural democracy in the classroom. In Darder, A., Torres, R., Gutierrez, H. (Eds.), Latinos and education (pp. 331-350). New York, NY: Routledge.
Google Scholar
Department of Education . (2003). National curriculum statement for mathematics for FET: Grades 10-12. Pretoria, South Africa:
Google Scholar
Giese, S., Zide, H., Koch, R., Hall, K. (2009). A study on the implementation and impact of the no-fee and exemption policies. Cape Town, South Africa: Alliance for Children’s Entitlement to Social Security.
Google Scholar
Giroux, H. (1992). Border crossings. New York, NY: Routledge.
Google Scholar
Giroux, H. (1998). Teachers as intellectuals: Towards a critical pedagogy of learning. South Hadley, MA: Bergin & Garvey.
Google Scholar
Govender, L. (2004). Teacher unions, policy struggle and educational change, 1994-2004. In Chisholm, L. (Ed.), Changing class: Educational and social change in post-apartheid South Africa. (pp. 267-291). London, England: Zed Books.
Google Scholar
Hochschild, A. R. (1983). The managed heart: Commercialization of human feeling. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Google Scholar
Hooks, B. (1994). Teaching to transgress: Education as the practice of freedom. New York, NY: Routledge.
Google Scholar
Jansen, J. (1999). Why outcomes-based education will fail: An elaboration. In Jansen, J., Christie, P. (Eds.), Changing curriculum: Studies on outcomes based education in South Africa. (pp. 145-156). Kenwyn: Juta.
Google Scholar
Jansen, J. (2001). Image-ining teachers: Policy images and teacher identity in South African classrooms. South African Journal of Education, 21, 242-246.
Google Scholar
Kesson, K. R., Henderson, R. G. (2010). Reconceptualizing professional development for curriculum leadership: Inspired by John Dewey and informed by Alain Badiou. Educational Philosophy and Theory, 42, 213-229.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Kruss, G. (1998). Teachers, curriculum 2005 and the education policy-making process. In Morrow, W., King, K. (Eds.), Vision and reality: Changing education and training in South Africa. (pp. 96-111). Cape Town, South Africa: University of Cape Town Press.
Google Scholar
Marcos, Subcommandante . (1995). Shadows of tender fury. The letters and communiqués of subcommandante marcos and the Zapatista Army for national liberation (Bardacke, F., Lopez, L. & the Watsonville, California, Human Rights Committee, Trans.). New York, NY: Monthly Review Press.
Google Scholar
Perumal, J. C. (2007). Identity, diversity and teaching for social justice. Peter Lang: Bern: Switzerland.
Google Scholar
Perumal, J. C. (2009). Leading and creating critically leaderful schools that make a difference: The post-apartheid South African case. International Journal of Leadership in Education.Vol. 12.1. pp.35-49.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Perumal, J. C. (2013). Pedagogy of refuge: education in a time of dispossession. Race Ethnicity and Education. Vol. 16.5. pp. 673-695.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Quinn, M. (2010). No room in the inn? The question of hospitality in the post(partum) labors of curriculum studies. In Malewski, E. (Ed.), Curriculum studies handbook: The next moment. (pp. 101-117). New York, NY: Routledge.
Google Scholar
Riasati, M. J., Mollaei, F. (2012). Critical pedagogy and language learning. International Journal of Humanities and Social Science, 2(21), 223-229.
Google Scholar
Schell, E. E. (1998). Gypsy academics and mother-teachers: Gender, contingent labor, and writing instruction. Portsmouth, NH: Boynton/Cook Publishers.
Google Scholar
Shor, I. (1992). Empowering education: Critical teaching for social change. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
Google Scholar
Smith, D. M. (Ed.). (1992). The apartheid city and beyond: Urbanization and social change in South Africa. London, England: Routledge.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Stearns, P. N., Stearns, C. Z. (1985). Emotionology: Clarifying the history of emotions and emotional standards. The American Historical Review, 90, 813-836.
Google Scholar | Crossref | Medline | ISI
Tabata, I. B. (n/d). Education for Barbarism. APDUSA Views. Cumberwood: Eastern Cape. Blackrose Press.
Google Scholar
Taylor, N., Vinjevold, P. (1999). Getting learning right: Report of the president’s education initiative. Johannesburg, South Africa: Joint Education Trust.
Google Scholar
Wieder, A. (2008). Teacher and comrade: Richard Dudley and the fight for democracy in South Africa. Albany: State University of New York Press.
Google Scholar
Yoon, K. H. (2005). Affecting the transformative intellectual: Questioning “noble” sentiments in critical pedagogy and composition. Journal of Advanced Composition, 25, 717-759.
Google Scholar
View access options

My Account

Welcome
You do not have access to this content.



Chinese Institutions / 中国用户

Click the button below for the full-text content

请点击以下获取该全文

Institutional Access

does not have access to this content.

Purchase Content

24 hours online access to download content

Your Access Options


Purchase

EUS-article-ppv for $36.00