ABSTRACT

This is the first book in English profiling the work of a research collective that evolved around the notion of "coloniality", understood as the hidden agenda and the darker side of modernity and whose members are based in South America and the United States. The project called for an understanding of modernity not from modernity itself but from its darker side, coloniality, and proposes the de-colonization of knowledge as an epistemological restitution with political and ethical implications.

Epistemic decolonization, or de-coloniality, becomes the horizon to imagine and act toward global futures in which the notion of a political enemy is replaced by intercultural communication and towards an-other rationality that puts life first and that places institutions at its service, rather than the other way around.

The volume is profoundly inter- and trans-disciplinary, with authors writing from many intellectual, transdisciplinary, and institutional spaces.

This book was published as a special issue of Cultural Studies.

chapter |32 pages

Worlds and Knowledges Otherwise1

The Latin American modernity/coloniality research program

chapter |13 pages

The Epistemic Decolonial Turn

Beyond political-economy paradigms1

chapter |16 pages

Shifting the Geopolitics of Critical Knowledge

Decolonial thought and cultural studies ‘others' in the Andes

chapter |31 pages

On the Coloniality of Being

Contributions to the development of a concept1

chapter |24 pages

Decolonization and the Question of Subjectivity

Gender, race, and binary thinking

chapter |30 pages

Decolonial Moves

Trans-locating African diaspora spaces

chapter |29 pages

Unsettling Race, Coloniality, and Caste

Anzaldúa's Borderlands/La Frontera, Martinez's Parrot in the Oven, and Roy's The God of Small Things

chapter |17 pages

The Eastern Margins of Empire

Coloniality in 19th Century Romania

chapter |21 pages

(In)Edible Nature

New world food and coloniality

chapter |22 pages

The Imperial-Colonial Chronotope

Istanbul-Baku-Khurramabad1

chapter |21 pages

The Missing Chapter of Empire

Postmodern reorganization of coloniality and post-Fordist capitalism1

chapter |66 pages

Delinking

The rhetoric of modernity, the logic of coloniality and the grammar of de-coloniality1

chapter |9 pages

Afterword