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Decolonial Thinking
Resistant Meanings and Communal Other-Sense
Edited by María Lugones and Patrick M. Crowley
Contributions by Michael Hames-García, Hil Malatino, Jen-Feng Kuo, Shireen Roshanravan, Laura Pérez, Sarah Lucia Hoagland, Jennifer McWeeny, Cindy Cruz, Gabriela Veronelli, Christine 'Cricket' Keating and Amy Lind
Published by: Indiana University Press
336 Pages, 2 b&w illus.
This book can be purchased from this website 120 days before the publish date
- Paperback
- 9780253073051
- Published: May 2025
$60.00
- eBook
- 9780253073075
- Published: May 2025
$59.99
This book can be purchased from this website 120 days before the publish date
- Hardcover
- 9780253073044
- Published: May 2025
$110.00
Other Retailers:
Decolonial Thinking delves into the intricate web of colonial practices, terms, and ideas that have woven themselves into people's lives. It seeks to understand how the tendrils of coloniality have insidiously attached themselves to the very fabric of self-understanding. From the mundane to the profound, this exploration sheds light on our relationship with all that constitutes life.
Editors María Lugones and Patrick M. Crowley have meticulously curated 11 unique articles by interdisciplinary theorists. These thought-provoking pieces compellingly address questions surrounding colonial legacies. Organized into five sections, the book navigates themes ranging from sexualities and multiple worlds to differential topographies. It also examines the transition from women-of-color politics to decoloniality, exploring resistance, coalition building, and pluriversality.
As decolonial theory gains global recognition, it has emerged as a critical lens through which we view capitalism, racism, gender discrimination, violence, and Eurocentrism. Decolonial Thinking boldly rejects oppressive rationalities, prompting fresh strategies for shared meanings. These strategies diverge radically from dominant disciplinary and academic categories of knowledge, inviting us to reimagine our understanding of the world.
Acknowledgments and Dedication
Introduction, by María Lugones and Patrick M. Crowley
Part I: Making Other-Sense of Sex and Gender
1. A Decolonial Revisiting of Gender, by María Lugones
2. Sexual Identity, Coloniality, and the Practice of Coming Out: A Conversation, by Michael Hames-García and María Lugones
3. Monstrous Becomings: Concepts for Building Decolonial Queer Coalitions, by Hil Malatino
Part II: Between Women of Color Politics and Decoloniality
4. Bridging Empires, Transgressing Disciplines: Methodological Interventions in Asian America, by Jen-Feng Kuo and Shireen Roshanravan
5. Towards the Decolonial: Dehumanization, US Women of Color Thought, and the Non-violent Politics of Love, by Laura Pérez
Part III: Methods and Maps toward Resistant Meanings
6. Feminist Advocacy Research, Relationality, and the Coloniality of Knowledge, by Sarah Lucia Hoagland
7. Topographies of Flesh: Women, Non-human Animals, and the Embodiment of Connection and Difference, by Jennifer McWeeny
8. Decolonial Aesthetics Beyond the Borders of Man: Sylvia Wynter's Theory and Praxis of Human-Aesthetic Transformation, by Patrick M. Crowley
Part IV: Radical Coalitions and Communal Politics
9. Hanging Out and an Infrapolitics of Youth, by Cindy Cruz
10. On a Non-dialogic Theory of Decolonial Communication, by Gabriela Veronelli
11. From Nation to Plurination: Plurinationalism, Decolonial Feminism, and the Politics of Coalitional Praxis in Ecuador, by Christine 'Cricket' Keating and Amy Lind
María Lugones (1944–2020) was a leading decolonial feminist philosopher, a popular educator at the Escuela Popular Norteña, and Professor of Comparative Literature at Binghamton University. She coedited (with Yuderkys Espinosa-Miñoso and Nelson Maldonado-Torres) Decolonial Feminism in Abya Yala: Caribbean, Meso, and South American Contributions and Challenges and authored dozens of philosophical essays, some of which are collected in Pilgrimages/Peregrinajes: Theorizing Coalition Against Multiple Oppressions and The María Lugones Reader.
Patrick M. Crowley is a Lecturer in English at Appalachian State University. His research examines decolonial aesthetics in the work of Caribbean and Afro-diasporic artists-theorists-practitioners.