A Reading Model in Positive Discourse Analysis of World Literature for Sustainable Peacebuilding



Author Information

Nishevita Jayendran, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India

Abstract

In a world ridden with “direct, structural and cultural violence” (Galtung & Fischer, 1973), education’s role in alleviating conflict has never been more critical. Peace education offers a systemic-systematic pathway to engage in sustainable ways of transforming individuals into ethical inhabitants of a strained planet. This paper delineates the way Positive Discourse Analysis (PDA) of world literature can enable Critical Peace Education (CPE) as curricular-pedagogical praxis. Literary humanistic inquiry presents a powerful approach to peacebuilding by fostering affective, ideological and ethical engagement with the realities around us through its multidimensional representation of conflict. Strengthening critical reading and interpretive competences enables holistic evidence-based interrogation of structural and cultural conflicts. World literature, characterised by globalisation and cosmopolitanism (Damrosch, 2003), organically disrupts generalised discourses on conflict and peace, emphasising their multicultural, multiethnic and pluralistic episteme through commentaries. Reading world literature therefore builds ethico-political intercultural competence and global citizenship, with PDA offering a “counter-hegemonic” pedagogical pathway to create discerning readers of the world through the word (Freire & Slover, 1983). Situating the disciplinary focus of peacebuilding within world literature, I present a reading model with PDA as an interpretive methodology to achieve CPE in adaptive, locally sensitive ways, mapping it to Monisha Bajaj’s four coordinates of CPE that build idealistic-ideological-politicisational-intellectual competencies (Haavelsrud, as cited in Bajaj, 2008). I conclude with a reading model based on PDA for CPE and comment on the normative, aesthetic and ideological pathways as three interconnected aspects that reading world literature can achieve as a pedagogy of peace.


Paper Information

Conference: SEACE2026
Stream: Curriculum Design & Development

This paper is part of the SEACE2026 Conference Proceedings (View)
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Posted by James Alexander Gordon