Theme: 5. Transmitting Knowledges: Institutions, Objects and Practices
Barbara Curda
French Institute of Pondicherry (IFP), India
Aryo Danusiri
University of Indonesia, Indonesia
Aarti Kawlra
International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS), Netherlands
Barbara Curda
French Institute of Pondicherry (IFP), India
Aryo Danusiri
University of Indonesia, Indonesia
Irfan Wahyudi
Universitas Airlangga, Indonesia
Eliza O'Donnell
The University of Melbourne, Australia
Indah Surya Wardhani
Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia
This paper panel follows discussions initiated during a workshop held at the French Institute of Pondicherry in February 2023 on the question of knowhow, not only as an epistemic question of knowledge production but also, as overt, and or covert, process(es) of transmission and learning, in different contexts, and to address, methodologically, the prevailing binary between knowhow and knowledge.
We are particularly aware of the significance of spaces of human interaction and exchange as critical to the production and reproduction of culture, and within it, of different forms of knowledge, knowhow and knowing in a broad sense. Assuming that modes, codes, and forms of transmission are socially, spatially, culturally and politically motivated, focusing on ways of knowing the world, of acting in and on it, especially at moments of rupture like the pandemic, can be particularly revealing. In the emerging era of artificial intelligence and machine learning, we are pressed to understand the role and significance of human choice, meaning, and decision-making, through both the minuscule and the multitude of tactics and strategies deployed in the mobilization and manipulation of materials, tools and bodily skills in the production and transmission of knowledge.
Our aim is to draw from a variety of cases to build a common vocabulary, to articulate and problematize the question of knowhow, to expand its conceptual contours, examine the various material objects, tools, skills, ideas, persons/bodies and spaces that mediate knowing in all its variations. We wish to examine how knowing circulates, how it is being transmitted through human as well as human–non human relationships in diverse spheres. Examining knowhow within the theoretical framework of academic research also poses the question of the interferences between what is deemed to be knowledge and who is the learner and who is the teacher, of their status, and their influence in the academy and, in turn, on the social world. What does one restitute, and how? For whom and for which purpose?
Presenter: Eliza O'Donnell – The University of Melbourne
Presenter: Barbara Curda – French Institute of Pondicherry (IFP)
Presenter: Aryo Danusiri – University of Indonesia
Presenter: Irfan Wahyudi – Universitas Airlangga
Presenter: Indah Surya Wardhani – Universitas Gadjah Mada