Maps and Fabulations: On Transnationalism, Transformative Pedagogies, and Knowledge Production in Higher Education
Ninutsa Nadirashvili () and
Katherine Wimpenny
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Ninutsa Nadirashvili: Centre for Global Learning, Coventry University, Coventry CV1 5FB, UK
Katherine Wimpenny: Centre for Global Learning, Coventry University, Coventry CV1 5FB, UK
Social Sciences, 2025, vol. 14, issue 8, 1-18
Abstract:
Higher education has long been subject to feminist critique, contesting traditional practices, with calls for transformative pedagogies that empower marginalised students, address social injustices and promote gender equality. Despite this, most classrooms in Western European universities remain largely unchanged, with educators facing the difficulty of imagining and/or enacting decolonial futures within their curricula. However, some progress has been made, particularly the inclusion of transnational scholarship in syllabi and a turn to transformative pedagogies, which allow for alternative ways of interdisciplinary knowing to enter academia. In this paper, we examine this coming together of approaches which promote dialogue and personal reflection to restructure discussions on equality, gender and knowledge production in the ‘classroom’. Using a creative critical account of feminist ethnography conducted at a Western European university, we present and discuss two illustrative vignettes about cultural mapping and critical fabulation, considering how dissonant voices have challenged Western concepts, exemplifying transformative pedagogy working in tandem with transnational thought. Key insights from the study identify approaches for facilitation of more open and richer discussions to reshape staff and student perspectives of gender, equality and knowledge production.
Keywords: gender; transnationalism; literature; knowledge production; higher education (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: A B N P Y80 Z00 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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