"This triple-tier collection on decoloniality is most distinctive in the way it opens new pathways for understanding the complexly intertwined past and present histories of communities which are often located outside a hegemonic European modernity, while simultaneously pointing to radically transformative future possibilities. Bringing together non-indigenous and indigenous histories, the core purpose of this well-conceived project is to retrieve deep-time and deep-place histories, demonstrating to us that there is no living history with a dead past. Its lasting value is the interdisciplinary approach, which invites readers to adopt a nuanced, pluriversal understanding of the planetary universe and of the many shifting streams and legacies of history that point toward reconstellations of a decolonial space. “Decoloniality,” the volumes argue, has to be both intersectional and global in reach, while remaining steeped in the values of conviviality and poetics of relationality -- if it is to uproot epistemological and material violence imposed by the tyranny of colonial modernity. The volumes offer a rare multi-dimensional approach to decoloniality that opens up new avenues of exploration."
- James Ogude is Professor and Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for the Advancement of Scholarship, University of Pretoria. Ogude’s most recent edited volumes include, Ubuntu and the Reconstitution of Community (Indiana UP) and (with Tafadzwa Mushonga). Environmental Humanities of Extraction in Africa: Poetics and Politics of Exploitation (Routledge), and (with Neil Kortenaar) The Archives of African Literature, (forthcoming, Cambridge UP).
"Decolonial Reconstellations magnificently launches “World Studies” as a sustained project of decentering of Western/modern and androcentric narratives of history, the economy, and "progress." It is based on the re-grounding insight that if there were, and are, multiple histories, there must also be multiple new beginnings for other world histories, and hence multiple possibles and futures emerging from the deep times and deep places existing, and at times even thriving, all over the world. Taken together, these volumes provide a cogent introduction to World Studies as a genuine pluriversalization of world histories -- essential at this historical juncture of planetary crisis and urgent civilizational transitions. This book will be of great interest to courses in history, anthropology, geography, political ecology and development, global, ethnic, and diverse area studies."
- Arturo Escobar, author of Pluriversal Politics (2020) and co-author of Relationality: An Emergent Politics of Life Beyond the Human (2024).
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Om bidragsyterne
Laura Doyle is Professor Emerita at University of Massachusetts-Amherst and Founding Co-Director of the World Studies Interdisciplinary Project (WSIP/) with Mwangi wa Gĩthĩnji. Book publications include Inter-imperiality: Vying Empires, Gendered Labors, and the Literary Arts of Alliance (Wallerstein Prize); Bordering on the Body (Leeson Prize); Freedom’s Empire; and two edited collections: Bodies of Resistance: New Phenomenologies of Politics, Agency, and Culture; and Geomodernisms: Race, Modernism, Modernity. Doyle has received a Leverhulme Research Professorship (UK); a Rockefeller Fellowship in Intercultural Scholarship in Afro-American Studies (Princeton University); and two ACLS Fellowships.
Mwangi wa Gĩthĩnji is Associate Professor and Associate Chair of Economics at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst and founding Co-Director of the World Studies Interdisciplinary Project with Laura Doyle. Publications include Ten Millionaires and Ten Million Beggars: a study of inequality and development in Kenya; the co-authored An Employment Targeted Plan for Kenya; and numerous articles. He has served in multiple editorial roles and consulted with agencies and NGOs, including the UNDP, Economic Commission for Africa, Africa Center for Economic Transformation, and the Society for International Development.
Simon Gikandi is Class of 1943 University Professor of English at Princeton University and Chair of the English Department. His most recent book, Slavery and the Culture of Taste, was awarded both the MLA James Russell Lowell Award and the Melville J. Herskovits Award of the African Studies Association. In addition to numerous articles, his several books include The Novel in Africa and the Caribbean since 1950 (Volume 11 of the Oxford History of the Novel in English). Gikandi has served as President of the Modern Language Association and as editor of PMLA, its official journal.