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Critical Perspectives on Decoloniality

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This book is both a deep dive into and a critique of foundational decolonial concepts and epistemologies, engaging both theoretical analyses of social issues and standpoints from activism. The book...
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  • 16 September 2025
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This book is both a deep dive into and a critique of foundational decolonial concepts and epistemologies, engaging both historical, theoretical analyses of social issues and conditions, and standpoints from activism. The chapters are situated within multiple, plural and shifting force fields within the academy, and present a pathway to critically engage political or academic practices within and outside the university. The authors specifically engage contestations and harmonies in approaches of decoloniality, epistemic injustices, Southern epistemologies and epistemologies of the Souths. Alongside the theoretical chapters sit interventions on self-liberation, healing, reconstitution of human life, embracing interdependence and defying boundaries. The book represents a critical intervention in the development of decolonial theories and methodologies, and will be of interest to scholars, students and activists within and outside of academia.

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Price: $54.95
Pages: 298
Publisher: Channel View Publications
Imprint: Multilingual Matters
Series: Global Forum on Southern Epistemologies
Publication Date: 16 September 2025
Trim Size: 9.65 X 6.85 in
ISBN: 9781836680727
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

EDUCATION / Adult & Continuing Education, Decolonisation of knowledge / Decoloniality, EDUCATION / Schools / Levels / Higher, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Process / Political Advocacy, Applied research methods / methodology, Higher education, tertiary education, Political activism / Political engagement

At a dark time in our history, this volume offers a rare lifeline. Speaking from places long marginal to the centers of planetary power, the authors in conversation here grapple with the contradictions so disfiguring civilization and society in the Global North. In proposing alternative, more generative ‘Southern’ sites for collective thinking and learning, they give acute, tangible meaning to the often-elusive task of decolonizing the production of knowledge.

Dorothy Takyiakwaa is Assistant Teaching Professor of African Studies, The Pennsylvania State University, USA.

Sinfree Makoni is Director of African Studies and Liberal Arts Professor of African Studies and Applied Linguistics, The Pennsylvania State University, USA.

Inviolata Vicky Khasandi-Telewa is Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow in African Studies, The Pennsylvania State University, USA.

Alissa J. Hartig is Associate Professor of Applied Linguistics, Portland State University, USA.

Contributors

Crain Soudien: Foreword

Sinfree Makoni, Dorothy Takyiakwaa, Vicky Khasandi-Telewa and Alissa J. Hartig: Introduction: Decoloniality and Southern Epistemologies as Alternatives

Part 1: Conceptions and Framings of Decoloniality: Contestations and Harmonies

Chapter 1. Lewis Gordon: Freedom, Justice and Decolonization

Chapter 2. Arturo Escobar: Beyond Monohumanism: An Emerging Narrative from Latin America              

Chapter 3. Mamphela Ramphele and Sinfree Makoni: In Conversation with Mamphela Ramphele

Chapter 4. Marit Tolo Østebø: Models as Viral Assemblages

Part 2: Epistemic (In)justices and Decolonization

Chapter 5. Sujata Patel: Colonialism and the Framing of Social Theory: A Hundred-Year History        

Chapter 6. Akosua Adomako Ampofo: Cross-Examining Epistemic Violence and Working Towards Epistemic Freedom

Chapter 7. Julia Suárez-Krabbe: Over Our Dead Bodies: The Death Project, Egoism and the Existential Dimensions of Decolonization

Part 3: Cases of Colonization and Approaches to Decolonization

Chapter 8. Murad Idris: A Conversation About ‘War for Peace’

Chapter 9. Frieda Ekotto: Reading Négritude Thinkers with Black Lives Matter

Chapter 10. Emiliano Treré: Key Challenges and Dangers in the Decolonization of Data (Studies)

Chapter 11. John Holmwood: Modern Capitalism as Colonialism

Chapter 12. Mary Louise Pratt: Planetarity and the Crisis of Knowledge: Dancing with the Trickster

Index