In a refreshingly novel approach to the writings of Gloria E. Anzaldúa (1942–2004), Andrea J. Pitts addresses issues relevant to contemporary debates within feminist theory and critical race studies. Pitts explores how Anzaldúa addressed, directly and indirectly, a number of complicated problems regarding agency in her writings, including questions of disability justice, trans theorizing, Indigenous sovereignty, and identarian politics. Anzaldúa’s conception of what Pitts describes as
multiplicitous agency serves as a key conceptual link between these questions in her work, including how discussions of agency surfaced in Anzaldúa’s late writings of the 1990s and early 2000s. Not shying away from Anzaldúa’s own complex and sometimes problematic framings of disability,
mestizaje, and Indigeneity, Pitts draws from several strands of contemporary Chicanx, Latinx, and African American philosophy to examine how Anzaldúa’s work builds pathways toward networks of solidarity and communities of resistance.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Anzaldúan Multiplicitous Agency
1. Interpretive Threads of Anzaldúa’s Work
Existential Phenomenology
Relational Ontology
Coalitional Politics
Structure of the Book
2. Geographies of Multiplicitous Selves
Examining Insularity and Isolationism
Examining Individualism and Imperialism
Learning from Nepantleras
3. Turning Ambivalence into Something Else
Insurrectionist Ethics and Agency
Resistant Reconstructions and Ambivalence
Agential Framings of Ambivalence
4. Putting Coyolxauhqui Together
Crip
Atravesadas
Disability and the Coyolxauhqui Imperative
Multiplicitous Coalition Building
5. Building Coalition
con Nos/otras
Trans Theorizing and Anzaldúa’s Writings
Critique of Anzaldúan Mestizaje
Resisting the Coloniality of Reality Enforcement
Multiplicitous Coalition Building
Conclusion: From
Nos/otras to
Nos/otrxs
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Über den Autor
Andrea J. Pitts is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte. They are the coeditor (with Mark William Westmoreland) of
Beyond Bergson: Examining Race and Colonialism through the Writings of Henri Bergson, also published by SUNY Press, and the coeditor (with Mariana Ortega, and José M. Medina) of
Theories of the Flesh: Latinx and Latin American Feminisms, Transformation, and Resistance.