Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Indian, non-white history now compulsory at Oxford

- Prasun Sonwalkar letters@hindustant­imes.com

A change in the history curriculum is making it mandatory for students at the University of Oxford to study Indian and other non-British and non-European history, amid growing claims that the teaching of philosophy and history in UK varsities is “too white”.

A recent campaign to remove the statue of colonialis­t Cecil Rhodes (1853-1902) from the Oriel College’s High Street frontage made much news last year, while students at the School of Oriental and African Studies want a curriculum free of “white” Aristotle, Kant and Plato.

An Oxford spokespers­on told Hindustan Times that the change in history was not a response to the Rhodes or any other campaign, but part of a continuing review of curriculum. Oxford has a long record of research into colonial and Indian history.

It will now be a requiremen­t, rather than an option, for students to take a paper on non-British and non-European history as part of the change that has attracted much attention in British media, with reports linking it to the campaigns to de-colonise the curriculum.

The spokespers­on said: “This is not a new paper; it is a new requiremen­t that students take at least one non-British or non-European paper from among the existing options. And to re-emphasise, contrary to what some in the media have suggested, this is a university-led initiative and not a response to any kind of campaign or pressure.

“In particular, it was not a response to last year’s Rhodes Must Fall campaign. In fact, the curriculum review began a couple of years before the campaign had even formed at Oxford.”

As academics at other universiti­es debated the change, the Rhodes Must Fall campaign group said the change did not go far enough, and that the real question is why non-European history did not become compulsory at the university until 2017.

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