Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1
I. Decoloniality In/As Praxis / Catherine E. Walsh
1. The Decolonial For: Resurgences, Shifts, and Movements
15
2. Insurgency and Decolonial Prospect, Praxis, and Project
33
3. Interculturality and Decoloniality 57
4. On Decolonial Dangers, Decolonial Cracks, and Decolonial
Pedagogies Rising 81
Conclusion: Sowing and Growing Decoloniality in/as Praxis: Some
Final Thoughts 99
II. The Decolonial Option / Walter D. Mignolo
5. What Does It Mean to Decolonize? 105
6. The Conceptual Triad: Modernity/Coloniality/Decoloniality
135
7. The Invention of the Human and the Three Pillars of the Colonial
Matrix of Power (Racism, Sexism, and Nature) 153
8. Colonial/Imperial Differences: Classifying and Inventing Global
Orders of Lands, Seas, and Living Organisms 177
9. Eurocentrism and Coloniality: The Question of the Totality of
Knowledge 194
10. Decoloniality Is an Option, Not a Mission 211
Concluding Remarks: Colonial Wounds, Decolonial Healings,
Re-existences, Resurgences 227
After-Word(s) 245
Bibliography 259
Index 279
Walter D. Mignolo is William H. Wannamaker Professor of Romance
Studies in Trinity College of Arts and Sciences and Professor of
Literature at Duke University and is the author and editor of
several books, including The Darker Side of Western Modernity:
Global Futures, Decolonial Options, also published by Duke
University Press.
Catherine E. Walsh is Senior Professor in the Area of Humanities
and Cultural Studies at the Universidad Andina SimÓn BolÍvar in
Ecuador and the author and editor of numerous books, most recently,
PedagogÍas decoloniales: PrÁcticas insurgentes de resistir,
(re)existir y (re)vivir, Tomo II.
"As the first book in the Decoloniality series, it sets the tone and terms; it opens the conversation on decoloniality that is relevant globally as the Right rises and the colonial matrix of power is only strengthened through global capitalism. On Decoloniality brings important insights to the fore from locations not as well-known by English-reading theorists who might not concentrate on colonial language areas other than English." - Laura Marie de Vos (Transmotion) "On Decoloniality reflects on what it means to think, live and act decolonially in our present moment: what is at stake when we seek a decolonial perspective in both theory and praxis. This is not a compilation of the latest literature or a comprehensive introduction to decolonial thought, but rather an invitation to think dialectically about the decolonial praxis(es) and decolonial analytics." - Rosa M. O'Connor Acevedo (Radical Philosophy Review) "Although divided into two distinct parts authored under individual signatures, this is a book, which like a piano concert for two hands, displays a high degree of interplay and collaboration between Mignolo and Walsh. . . . For all readers and doers a major challenge and invitation is issued in the pages of On Decoloniality for learning how to think relationality will make serious demands of all imaginaries and modes of thinking we have thus far inherited and developed. This carefully thought-out book is not only a necessary intervention in the annals of 'theory' but a felicitous achievement in collaboration and in bringing together the task of presenting concepts, analytics and praxis under one single treatise." - Sara Castro-Klarén (MLN) "In the current climate of trying to rethink everything in order to find a way out of the contemporary morass of bankrupt and destructive epistemologies that are destroying the planet, [this] book is a timely intervention. It succinctly offers the reasons to find new concepts as well as providing incremental steps that do not simply reproduce what we 'know' already." - Sneja Gunew (Postcolonial Text) "Recalling Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang's critique that reminds us that decolonisation is more than a metaphor for Indigenous peoples, the participants in this forum grapple with the colonial matrix of power and modernity/coloniality/decoloniality analytics to unbuild violence and imagine worlds of hope and freedom through alliances that recognise settler guilt." - Michele Lobo (Postcolonial Studies) "The fable of modernity was the unifying arc of this aggressive universalism, and Mignolo’s principal argument is that any variety of Marxist argument that focuses primarily on capitalism, class, and material exploitation misses the forms of power that came through this cultural and epistemological domination. To resist and replace it with another epistemological worldview, Walsh and Mignolo recommend decoloniality, an outlook that embraces Indigenous modes of thinking and rejects those Western expressions of modernity imposed on much of the world through colonialism and empire." - Arjun Appadurai (The Nation) "An un-disciplinary read, challenging the foundational logic of Western knowledge production." - Kirsten Mundt (Cultural Studies) "What is striking about the book is the clarity with which.the known history and its hidden shadow are put in relation to one another, highlighting their mutual correlations and consequences. The invention of America and the genocides of other civilizations, the massive slave trade, and the appropriation of lands, defined a new pattern of labor management in Europe and non-European countries: this shaped the emergence of the colonial economy, coloniality of knowledge, and the subjectivities of the conqueror and the conquered." - Laura Bourocco (Kronos)
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