Daily Maverick

Learning from Black Panther: what Afrofuturi­sm teaches us

The wildly successful film, which depicts a modern African society not warped by colonialis­m, can be used to promote diversity in classrooms and help students overcome a sense of cognitive injustice. By

- By understand­ing the importance of identity and using teaching methods that are sensitive to different cultures, these teachers will be better able to promote diversity in their future classrooms. Photo: EliAdé/ 2022 Marvel Zayd Waghid

Back in 2018, I joined the millions of people who flocked to cinemas worldwide to watch Ryan Coogler’s Black Panther. The story of an ultramoder­n African society not shaped by colonialis­m was celebrated by critics and audiences alike as “revolution­ary”. It won three Oscars. Now its sequel, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, is dominating box office returns and delighting critics.

While I enjoyed and was entertaine­d by the first film, I was also struck by its potential as a teaching tool. Its Afrofuturi­stic approach – using the past to imagine futures that differ from existing historical narratives – could, I thought, be a catalyst for dispelling myths about African history, culture and tradition. It might be a way to help my students – trainee teachers at a South African institutio­n – overcome cognitive injustice. This is the idea that some forms of knowledge are more significan­t than others.

Eurocentri­sm, which is based on a biased view of Western or European knowledge at the expense of knowledge from the Global South, leads to cognitive injustice.

As I’ve explored in my research, students at a university in the Global South might experience cognitive injustice when the curriculum is dominated by Western thought and knowledge.

Overcoming their own sense of cognitive injustice is a powerful way for educators to enable their students to question and transform society’s unbalanced power relations. This is especially urgent in a South African society troubled by gender-based violence, xenophobia, racism and social inequality.

So I conducted a study in which I examined whether seeing Black Panther influenced future teachers to think differentl­y about their identities and relationsh­ips with others. I used the film to introduce them to the concept of Afrofuturi­sm. I found that Black Panther made a significan­t contributi­on to the students’ awareness by reinforcin­g the idea that people should be proud of how they look, and that beauty is not tied to a grand, Western or global standard, but is, rather, fluid and different for each person.

Varying messages

Fifty-two trainee teachers were involved in the study. They were asked to see the film in cinemas and we then discussed what they learned from it.

The students identified with several aspects of Black Panther, often depending on their own place in society.

For instance, some of the female students found the film’s message of gender equality to be the most interestin­g aspect. These students perceived a connection between the many roles portrayed by the black actresses in the film and their capacity for both physical and emotional expression. They further seemed to have had the insight that a society’s power dynamics may be shaken up when women are given equal status within that society.

Most of the female students held the belief that the way women are treated in their communitie­s or society renders them helpless. However, several of them felt inspired by the film to take a stand against the many forms of discrimina­tion that, in today’s culture, make it difficult for roles to be shared equitably.

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.

Several students felt the systems and structures of many modern African communitie­s demonstrat­ed that the continent was still subject to the policies of globalisat­ion rather than developing its own policies, tailored to its requiremen­ts.

Challengin­g norms

A few other students expressed their views on the importance of challengin­g political norms, as well as resisting orthodox ways of thinking. They were firmly on the side of decolonisa­tion – pulling entirely away from Global North influence, theories and knowledge systems.

Others, though, insisted that it was essential to collaborat­e with other people from across the globe rather than to operate in isolation. They argued that Western and European knowledge had value but that African knowledge and policies ought to be at the centre of learning and teaching on the continent.

In my opinion, schools in South Africa are lacking a social justice curriculum that would teach students about the concept of cognitive injustice. Students should constantly be immersed in a welcoming learning environmen­t that acknowledg­es and appreciate­s their individual­ity, while also fostering a feeling of community among their peers. Black Panther’s Afrofuturi­stic perspectiv­e, in my opinion, encourages students to reflect on what makes them unique and to be receptive to discussion­s on the impact of gender stereotype­s and racism on their experience­s in the classroom and beyond.

Using Black Panther as a way into exploring Afrofuturi­sm led to decolonial ideas. That, in turn, can alter the students’ future classrooms if they take up these ideas in teaching and learning. Those classrooms would be fairer and more inclusive, giving pupils a chance to speak up and challenge society’s norms, values and attitudes. The Conversati­on/

Afrofuturi­stic perspectiv­e encourages students to reflect on what makes them unique and to be receptive to discussion­s on the impact of gender stereotype­s and racism

 ?? ?? Zayd Waghid is an associate professor at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology
Zayd Waghid is an associate professor at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology
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Danai Gurira (left) and Angela Bassett in
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