ABSTRACT

This book advances critical discussions about what coloniality, decoloniality, and decolonisation mean and imply in the Nordic region.

It brings together analysis of complex realities from the perspectives of the Nordic peoples, a region that is often overlooked in current research, and explores the processes of decolonisation that are taking place in this region. The book offers a variety of perspectives that engage with issues such as Islamic feminism and the progressive left; racialisation and agency among Muslim youths; indigenising distance language education for Sami; extractivism and resistance among the Sami; the Nordic international development endeavour through education; Swedish TV reporting on Venezuela; creolizing subjectivities across Roma and non-Roma worlds and hierarchies; and the whitewashing and sanitisation of decoloniality in the Nordic region.

As such, this book extends much of the productive dialogue that has recently occurred internationally in decolonial thinking but also in the areas of critical race theory, whiteness studies, and postcolonial studies to concrete and critical problems in the Nordic region. This should make the book of considerable interest to scholars of history of ideas, anthropology, sociology, cultural studies, postcolonial studies, international development studies, legal sociology, and (intercultural) philosophy with an interest in coloniality and decolonial social change.

chapter 1|15 pages

Surviving like Scheherazade. Veiled women and liberalism

The trap of the progressive left 1

chapter 2|14 pages

Racialisation in a “raceless” nation

Muslims navigating Islamophobia in Denmark's everyday life

chapter 5|21 pages

Coloniality of knowledge and the responsibility to teach

Nordic educational interventions in the “South”

chapter 8|19 pages

Decoloniality

Between a travelling concept and a relational onto-epistemic political stance