Talking Back to Shakespeare in a South African Lecture Room: Engaging in Critical Conversations about Social Justice, Understanding and Tolerance

Abstract

In this paper, I reflect on a series of lectures, underpinned by the principles of Freire’s critical pedagogy, when engaging with Shakespeare’s The Tempest. Working with pre-service teachers in a South African School of Education, I used a talk-back design to enable them to talk back to the canon and open interactional dialogue about social justice, understanding and tolerance. I used hot seating, teacher-in-role and written work and found that pre-service teachers grasped the opportunities to set the agenda for interrogating and resisting forms of knowledge usually deemed worthy. I understood that using a dialogic platform enabled them to identify different forms of knowledge and it allowed them to understand that all texts are socially constructed, are of a time, reflect an agenda, and need to be interrogated and resisted, if necessary. I found the talk-back design important in enabling democratic participation as pre-service teachers designed their own counter-discursive responses as they confronted the canonical imperatives.

Presenters

Ansurie Pillay
Associate Professor, School of Education, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Learner Diversity and Identities

KEYWORDS

Critical Conversations, Social Justice, Pre-service teachers, Shakespeare, Canon, Talk-Back, Hot-seating