ABSTRACT

In this chapter, I propose to decolonize feminist transdisciplinary concepts such as gender, through the unruly and affective concept of wild theorizing. Wildness suggests both an uncharted territory for theories to come and an affective attunement to the onto-material effects that conceptual frames impose upon othered bodies and identities. Qualifying theory and theorizing, wildness suggests the need for an always localized place of enunciation that resists the easy assimilation of feminist transdisciplinary concepts that travel from the Global North to the so-called Global South. Wild theorizing, rather, activates the possibility of conceptual encountering and misencountering between the specificity of the Latin American postcolonial reality, the genealogical grounds uncovered by Feminist Decolonial Latin American thinking, and the concepts with which feminism builds itself in the so-called Global North.