Presents struggles for liberation in the Americas from the perspectives of structural victims
Struggles for Liberation in Abya Yala explores the ways people occupying different positionalities respond to various catastrophes while discussing how collective processes of struggle make new meanings and create new forms of relationality and subjectivity. Bringing together contributions by a diverse panel of well-established voices and rising scholars, this provocative volume challenges readers to resist, take direct collective action, organize, protest, and give proper uptake to social movements that fight against injustice and life-threatening conditions.
Operating primarily within the context of ‘Abya Yala’ — the term deployed by indigenous peoples to refer to the US, Latin America, and the Caribbean — the volume demonstrates and advances the explanatory and normative power of Philosophy of Liberation and the Decolonial Turn through theoretical analysis of current social changes unfolding in the Americas. Throughout the book, academic scholars and on-the-ground activists illustrate the reach, impact, and implications of radical social transformations that support victims of the system.
Offering perspectives from the people who have chosen to rebel and act in solidarity against the system that oppresses them, Struggles for Liberation in Abya Yala:
* Addresses different struggles for social justice in the US, México and Latin America
* Draws from philosophical tradition with influence in Africana philosophy, feminism, critical race theory, ethics, and political philosophy
* Tasks readers to fight for reparations, stand in solidarity with marginalized and indigenous peoples, and abolish dispossession
* Critiques the capitalist and colonial relationships that facilitate the exploitation of large segments of the population
* Promotes social mobilization through education and the decolonization of Westernized university and educational practices
An urgent call to action for all those seeking to fundamentally change the world, Struggles for Liberation in Abya Yala is a must-read for undergraduate and graduate students, educators and university lecturers, academic researchers and scholars, social and political activists, policymakers, journalists and media professionals, and general readers who are committed to liberation.
Jadual kandungan
Introduction
Notes on Contributors
Section I: Theoretical Approaches
1 Liberation Philosophy and the Search for Combative Decoloniality
Nelson Maldonado-Torres
2 Decolonizing Understanding: A Utopian Reading of Aníbal Quijano’s Coloniality of Power and Knowledge
Alejandro Vallega
3 Transmodernity as Postulate: First Eurocentrism, Prejudice, Critique
Enrique Téllez-Fabiani
Section II: Gender
4 Reflection on the Erotics of Liberation: A Contemporary Feminist Latin American Perspective
AFy L Women Collective
5 Sylvia Wynter’s Gender and Genre For A Queer and Trans-Inclusive Politics
Elisabeth Paquette
Section III: Education
6 Struggles to Make Black Lives Matter
Ernesto Rosen Velásquez
7 In the Trap of Critique: Making Decolonization Metaphor
Stephanie Rivera-Berruz
8 Education in Latin America: Decolonization as an Ethical-Political Urgency
Nadia Heredia
9 Philosophy of Liberation Praxis in Mexico City
Gabriel Herrera Salazar
Section IV: Social Movements
10 Experiences of Weaving: The Chilean Social Revolt as an Aesthetic Proposal
Paloma Griffero
11 Migration Justice in Times of Pandemics in the Borderland of Ciudad Juárez/El Paso
Luis Rubén Díaz Cepeda
12 Latin American Animal Ethics
Iván Sandoval-Cervantes and Amy Reed-Sandoval
13 Zapata Revisited: Views On The Zapatista National Liberation Army
Ernesto Castañeda
14 Decolonizing Peyote Politics in Mexico and Southwest USA
Osiris Gonzalez
Index
Mengenai Pengarang
LUIS RUBÉN DÍAZ CEPEDA is Assistant Professor in the Humanities Department, Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juárez, Mexico. His research focuses on ethics, borders, social movements, critical theory, and philosophy of liberation. He is author of Social Movements and Latin American Philosophy: From Ciudad Juárez to Ayotzinapa and co-editor of Latin American Immigration Ethics.
ERNESTO ROSEN VELÁSQUEZ is Associate Professor at the College of Arts and Sciences, University of Dayton, Ohio, USA. He specializes in Latinx philosophy, critical philosophy of race, and political philosophy. He is co-editor of Decolonizing the Westernized University: Interventions in Philosophy of Education From Within and Without.