Unlearning a commitment to the "we" in a transnational feminist classroom
This chapter discusses pedagogical approaches to Julia's confusion and the lure of the "we". The paradox of learning and unlearning; absorbing and deconstructing leaves room for the university to weigh its criteria so that only some students easily pass as the precisely suitable ones, the ones with a perfect balance between qualities. Exposing "West" as a political commitment to a certain version of global capitalism may act as "demystificatory criticism". The multicultural, transnational class with students from a rich variety of backgrounds, albeit mainly European yet also globally diverse, is not an element against a homogenizing "we". When a longer legacy of feminist thinking is needed an appropriate framing of older texts, explaining why certain discussions were essential in different points of time, is useful. The "we" was constructed around a few discursive tropes, often through dichotomous juxtapositions. The low score is compensated by his current education, indicating that his privilege is not a stable position depending on background. ; Peer reviewed