2019
DOI: 10.1177/0952695119859727
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Behind the Rhodes statue: Black competency and the imperial academy

Abstract: Recent criticisms of the Rhodes Must Fall (RMF) Oxford campaign have problematized the presence of Black bodies within British higher education by reference to an ideal image of the impartial and discerning academy. In this article, I historically and intellectually contextualize the apprehension, expressed in the debates over RMF Oxford, that an intimate Black presence destabilizes the ethos of higher education. Specifically, I argue that much more than Rhodes’ statue implicates the British academy in the Emp… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 53 publications
(47 reference statements)
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“…A case in point of such prior and long-standing debates over public memorialisation was the defacing of British imperialist and colonial politician Cecil Rhodes' statue at the campus of the University of Cape Town in 2015. This act of protest by student and activist Chumani Maxwele resonated globally and sparked the Rhodes Must Fall movement, which echoed in Britain with the demand of the removal of Cecil Rhodes statue from Oxford's Oriel College, as well as further calls to decolonise universities and their curriculum (Knudsen and Andersen 2019;Shilliam 2019). This initiative provoked fierce opposition, particularly in the right-wing media, based on the belief that the figure of Cecil Rhodes should be judged by the standards of his time, rather than by those of today.…”
Section: Statues Mattermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A case in point of such prior and long-standing debates over public memorialisation was the defacing of British imperialist and colonial politician Cecil Rhodes' statue at the campus of the University of Cape Town in 2015. This act of protest by student and activist Chumani Maxwele resonated globally and sparked the Rhodes Must Fall movement, which echoed in Britain with the demand of the removal of Cecil Rhodes statue from Oxford's Oriel College, as well as further calls to decolonise universities and their curriculum (Knudsen and Andersen 2019;Shilliam 2019). This initiative provoked fierce opposition, particularly in the right-wing media, based on the belief that the figure of Cecil Rhodes should be judged by the standards of his time, rather than by those of today.…”
Section: Statues Mattermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Caught in between lives, this native, claimed Malinowski, would craft a reactionary politics, one which combined universalist relations a la associational mode with the ascriptive order of tribal life. These combinations led the "changing native" to ascribe to pathological ideologies, such as Black nationalism, which challenged the integrity of imperial order (Foks 2018;Shilliam 2019).…”
Section: Social Anthropology and Rastafarimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These studies were part of a broader attempt by the University of Edinburgh's anthropologists "to gain theoretical understanding of the more obvious 'problems'; of race relations, including the integration of immigrant groups, racial prejudice and discrimination" (Little, 1960, p. 259). However, this focus had little lasting impact on British social anthropology (Mills, 2010;Shilliam, 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%