ABSTRACT

Contributors Immanuel Wallerstein, Enrique Dussel, Walter Mignolo, Agustin Lao, Lewis Gordon, James V. Fenelon, Roberto Hernandez, James Cohen, Santiago Slabosky, Susanne Jonas, and Thomas Reifer. By the mid-twenty-first century, white Euro-Americans will be a demographic minority in the United States and Latino/as will be the largest minority (25 percent). These changes bring about important challenges at the heart of the contemporary debates about political transformations in the United States and around the world. Latino/as are multiracial (Afro-latinos, Indo-latinos, Asian-latinos, and Euro-latinos), multi-ethnic, multireligious (Jewish, Catholic, Protestant, Muslim, indigenous, and African spiritualities), and of varied legal status (immigrants, citizens, and illegal migrants). This collection addresses for the first time the potential of these diverse Latino/a spiritualities, origins, and statuses against the landscape of decolonization of the U.S. economic and cultural empire in the twenty-first century. Some authors explore the impact of Indo-latinos and Afro-latinos in the United States and others discuss the conflicting interpretations and political conflicts arising from the "Latinization" of the United States.

part |27 pages

Introduction

chapter |25 pages

Latin@s and the “Euro-American Menace”

The Decolonization of the U.S. Empire in the Twenty-First Century

part |43 pages

Latin@s in World-Historical Perspective

chapter |15 pages

“Ser Hispano”

Un Mundo en el “Border” de Muchos Mundos

chapter |15 pages

Huntington's Fears

“Latinidad” in the Horizon of the Modern/Colonial World

part |31 pages

Decolonization, Afro-Latin@s, and the African Diaspora

part |33 pages

Indigenous People in the Americas

chapter |16 pages

Indigenous Struggles over Autonomy, Land, and Community

Antiglobalization and Resistance in World-Systems Analysis

chapter |15 pages

Running for Peace and Dignity

From Traditionally Radical Chicanos/as to Radically Traditional Xicanas/os

part |24 pages

Decolonizing Spiritualities

chapter |16 pages

A Latin@ Jewish Disruption of the Holocaustic U.S.-Centric Constellation of Suffering

Toward a Polycentric Project of Spiritualities in a Transmodern Context of Voices

chapter |6 pages

Decolonizing Spiritualities

Spiritualities That Are Decolonizing and the Work of Decolonizing Our Understanding of These

part |49 pages

Latinization and Decolonization

chapter |15 pages

Decolonization from within the Americas

Latin@ Immigrant Responses to the U.S. National Security Regime, and the Challenges of Reframing the Immigration Debate

chapter |13 pages

Latin@ Century, Pacific Century

Twenty-First-Century Possibilities in World-Systems Perspective