Published April 2, 2026 | Version v1
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Literature Education in Postcolonial Contexts: Innovative Decolonial Strategies for Curriculum Renewal and Cultural Reclamation

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This paper examines creative decolonial approaches for changing curricula, pedagogy, and cultural engagement as well as the enduring impact of colonial legacies on literature education in postcolonial states. The paper highlights important decolonial interventions, such as curriculum renewal, pedagogical innovation, language inclusion, and the integration of multimodal literacies, through a critical review of current research and educational practices across African, Caribbean, and South Asian contexts. It illustrates how critical literacy, cultural self-efficacy, and learner agency may be promoted through the use of indigenous texts, vernacular languages, and culturally responsive teaching techniques. The study also highlights the importance of legislative frameworks, community involvement, and educators in maintaining significant curriculum change. This paper concludes that decolonising literary education entails a radical reorientation of knowledge production and pedagogical practice rather than just adding local texts. Decolonial literature education can enable students to critically interact with historical and modern realities, reconstruct cultural identities, and support inclusive and socially responsive educational systems by elevating minority voices and advancing epistemic justice.

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