New Keywords: Migration and Borders >> La esperanza del monstruo democrático, entre Syriza y Podemos, Antonio Negri, Raúl Sánchez Cedillo >> Catalunya Trans, Paul B.Preciado >> Decolonization is not a metaphor, Eve Tuck, K. Wayne Yang >> Decolonizing the Transgender Imaginary >> The big prison. Storys of harraga >> Transgender activism in Russia, Yana Sitnikova […]
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The Johannesburg Salon, Volume 9 >> Signal #1 >> The Johannesburg Salon, Volume 8 >> TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, Volume 1, Issue 3 >> The Johannesburg Salon, Volume 7 >> e-misférica 11.1: Decolonial Gesture >> Journal Crisis and Critique, Crisis Today, Volume 1, Issue 3 >> Decoloniality and Crisis >> Journal Crisis and Critique / […]
interviews
Decolonial Struggles and Performative Interventions into Western Politics, interview with Marissa Lôbo >> “Artist-proletarians” are everywhere, interview with Dmitry Vilensky (Chto delat?) >> Post-Soviet Imaginary and Global Coloniality: a Gendered Perspective, interview with Madina Tlostanova >> Mi sexualidad es una creación artística, interview with Lucía Egaña Rojas >> Communication Guerrilla: Transversality in Everyday Life?, interview […]
Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui
Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui explores the possibilities for decolonization through an analysis of the “multicultural” state as an ongoing practice of coloniality that recognizes and incorporates indigenous people but only as static, archaic figures defined by a continuous relationship to an idealized past. As Cusicanqui demonstrates, this truncated recognition subordinates indigenous people, depriving them of their contemporaneity, complexity, and dynamism and, therefore, of their potential to challenge the given order. Coloniality and its relations of domination, she claims, are also reproduced in the knowledge production of academic scholars of decoloniality, primarily from the global North. These academics, she argues, appropriate the language and ideas of indigenous scholars without grappling with the relations of force that define their relationships to them, thus decontextualizing and depoliticizing these concepts and marginalizing indigenous scholars from their own debates. Counterposing the Aymara concept of ch’ixi—a parallel coexistence of difference—to multiculturalism and hybridity, which incorporates and flattens or distorts difference, Cusicanqui shows that decolonization must be not only a discourse but also an affirmative practice.
e-borderlands journal
We wish to think in the spaces between disciplines, their borderlands, so as to challenge the framing and disciplining of knowledge within modernity. We wish to promote and support new forms of writing which blur the lines between fiction, journalism, and essayistic prose. And politically, we feel that the issue of borders – between nations, sexualities, economies, identities and peoples – brings together some of the most pressing issues in the 21st century, issues which drive violence and conflict, mark out profound dilemmas over power, sovereignty and autonomy under globalisation, and remain central to the question of whether we can continue to live together and survive.