This book presents a transdisciplinary and transnational challenge to the enduring coloniality of political concepts, discussing the need to decolonise both their theoretical constructions.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface: We Shall Dance Better
Oscar Guardiola-Rivera
At the Crossroads of Coloniality, Power, and Knowledge: It is Time to Decolonise Political Concepts
Valentin Clavé-Mercier and Marie Wuth
Part I: Decolonial Horizons - Revealing the Coloniality of Knowledge and Power
- Historicising History: A Critique Enabling View of History
Karim Barakat
- The Recalcitrance of White Ignorance
Laurencia Sáenz Benavides
- The Idealised Subject of Freedom and the Refugee
Shahin Nasiri
Part II: Feeling Coloniality - Bodies, Sexuality and Agency
- Politics Without a Proper Locus. Political Agency between Action and Practice
Henrike Kohpeiß and Marie Wuth
- Enfleshed Political Violences. Rethinking Sexual Violence from a Decolonial Critique to the Political Construction of the Body as Flesh
Cecilia Cienfuegos
Part III: Subverting Coloniality - Decolonising the Language of Resistance
- On Translation, the Politics of Language, and Anti-authoritarian Political Practice in the Southern Mediterranean
Laura Galián
- Decolonising Sovereignty and Reimagining Autonomy: Adivasi Assertions and Interpretations of Law
Astha Saxena and Radhika Chitkara
- Indigeneity, Autochthony, and Belonging: Conceptual Ambiguity as an Impediment to Decolonisation in South Africa
Rafael Verbuyst
Afterword
Ritu Vij