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decoloniality
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (2): 393–408.
Published: 01 May 2019
... other than a continuation of the horrors we have already endured; thus it is a set-up for our continued asymmetrical antagonisms. Over the last few years I have been attempting to think through what I have come to call a pure decolonial project. Because I do not think we can continually invent...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (2): 261–273.
Published: 01 May 2019
... life and a refusal to engage in conventional secular-liberal politics, not just its practical entailments (i.e., engagement with the state) but its ideals as well? Two instances of this approach in France come to mind. The first is the Parti des Indigènes de la République (PIR), a radical decolonial...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2022) 34 (2 (97)): 153–154.
Published: 01 May 2022
... surface and altering its shape through distortion and multiplication, the artist thus enacts a deep commitment to what Walter Mignolo describes as decolonial options, or coexisting universes of meaning, over any single universal truth. This is a vision of a world in which, as the Zapatistas put...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2018) 30 (1): 19–34.
Published: 01 January 2018
... been colonized and its production is a form of colonizing instead of decolonial practice. This article explores such problems through contextualizing and exploring, in an age of neoconservatism and neoliberalism, recent theoretical responses, ranging from British cultural studies to recent developments...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (2): 197–214.
Published: 01 May 2019
... to minoritized populations. decoloniality diversity minoritized subjects redress social justice On October 16 and 17, 2017, at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, we brought together scholars from around the world to collectively investigate the concept, history, and administration of the global...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2022) 34 (2 (97)): 155–166.
Published: 01 May 2022
... not given much thought to sovereign debt. Most of my prior work focused on Puerto Rican and Latinx decolonial cultural practices. But, right after the governor of Puerto Rico announced that the archipelago's debt was so significant that it was “unpayable,” I felt that to continue any work, I needed to pause...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2018) 30 (1): 1–2.
Published: 01 January 2018
... that its production would be a form of colonizing instead of decolonial practice”? Drawing extensively on his earlier writings on Frantz Fanon, Gordon moves us beyond the hackneyed debates over authenticity and appropriation, showing that “it is not about who ‘owns’ thought and has the ‘right’ to aesthetic...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2021) 33 (3 (95)): 313–348.
Published: 01 September 2021
..., the production of the subject, the creation of the mass, technological reproducibility, speed, and a host of other phenomena that go along with the rise of the late modern? One of the important elements of postcolonial and decolonial thinking has been to challenge historical narratives and discourses...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2021) 33 (3 (95)): 417–440.
Published: 01 September 2021
... of the Japanese archipelago as an imperial imaginary of the unified geopolitical territory and try to counter it by bringing in a more relational approach known as archipelagic thinking. The decolonial and diasporic orientations of archipelagic thinking are squarely opposed to the imperial and settler-colonial...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2022) 34 (3 (98)): 329–332.
Published: 01 September 2022
... . New York : Columbia GSAPP . McKittrick Katherine . 2021 . Dear Science and Other Stories . Durham, NC : Duke University Press . Mignolo Walter D. , and Walsh Catherine E. 2018 . On Decoloniality: Concepts, Analytics, Praxis . Durham, NC : Duke University Press...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2021) 33 (1 (93)): 65–85.
Published: 01 January 2021
... of dispossession assuaged by the exchange of things? And how much does it matter that “decolonial” projects draw on the currency of colonialism to make broader claims, often with little pretense that what they are protesting is covered by the rubric of colonial at all? 9 Initiatives are thick and thin...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (2): 289–322.
Published: 01 May 2019
...; Bhaba 1994) ; and the more recent “decolonial” agenda emerging from the Latin American context that is concerned with the making of Western modernity, the “coloniality of power,” and the long history of anticolonial thought in the Americas ( Mignolo 2007; Quijano 2000) . More recent circulations...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2023) 35 (3 (101)): 279–288.
Published: 01 September 2023
... the implications of considering the state across time and place. Our multidisciplinary and comparative perspective—including critical, biopolitical, postcolonial, and decolonial approaches—emphasized that science operates differentially within distinct parts of the state and among different states. Some of us used...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (1): 45–67.
Published: 01 January 2019
... left critics a basic lack of familiarity with the decolonizing corpus” ( Stam and Shohat 2012 : 115). This body of work foregrounds the “historicized articulations of subaltern subjectivity” (ibid.: 112) and is thus fundamental for an understanding of decolonial/antiracist politics, which the Left...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2012) 24 (2 (67)): 239–247.
Published: 01 May 2012
..., postage stamps, and governmental institutions.
Yet the nation-state is an ideal of recent origin, uncertain future, and, for many,
devastating consequences. Following the destruction of the Ottoman, Austro-
Hungarian, Romanov, and German empires after World War I and the decoloni-
zation of French...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2021) 33 (1 (93)): 89–111.
Published: 01 January 2021
..., as an experience of the aesthetic, such as one finds fleshed out in Jacques Rancière ( 1995 ; 2010 ). Affirmed at the juncture of a language politics of dissensus, a decolonial translation practice, and an ethics of care is the desire—indeed the necessity—of retrieving, as Simone Weil ( 1952 ) insisted...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 419–445.
Published: 01 September 2019
... of cartographic territories” but “through the (attempted) atmospheric control of every aspect of life.” Understanding atmospheric policing as a key mode of operation in the war power–police power nexus links decolonial struggles with protest activism like the Movement for Black Lives (see Márquez and Rana 2017...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2013) 25 (3 (71)): 559–573.
Published: 01 September 2013
... sciences in contrast were characterized by a vitalizing optimism, particularly in relation to decolonialization and modernization. Anthropology even appeared to offer an alternative, in the sense that it could replace religion and politics. This would be impossible today. JL: Could you say something...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2023) 35 (3 (101)): 443–455.
Published: 01 September 2023
..., and not just symbolically.” 9 By centering materialist terms of restitution and compensation, radical decolonial theorists seek to define “what decolonization is not” (Césaire [1955] 1972: 32). It is not the transformation of Indigenous politics into a liberal doctrine of cosmopolitanism, just...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2023) 35 (2 (100)): 191–206.
Published: 01 May 2023
... that there is much to be gained by exploring how influential political coalitions, from the heterogenous collective behind the Brexit vote in the UK to those animating decolonial movements across the world, may be held together through more tenuous and ambiguous sub-certainties. Not least because...
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