After the Decolonial. David LehmannЧитать онлайн книгу.
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CONTENTS
1 Cover
5 Preface: In the Time of COVID
8 Glossary
9 Introduction The institutional and social setting Critique of the decolonial The colonial in anthropology Popular religion, culture and ethnicity Race, ethnicity and gender: in search of social justice Evangelical Christianity Indigenous movements and democracy Notes
10 1 The Latin American Decolonial The ‘decolonial’ in universalist mode: Said and Fanon Fanon and Sartre: blacks and Jews Latin American and Latin Americanist postcolonial theories Quijano, Mignolo, Santos The grounded decolonial Philosophical lineage The true taboo-breakers: autonomous feminism takes on the world Intersectionality Cultural and ethnic difference also intersect Notes
11 2 Indigeneity, Gender and Law The colonial in modern Mexican social science Deep Mexico The Zapatista uprising of 1994 in Southern Mexico Interculturalidad: cultural difference in knowledge, education and law Legal pluralism as ventriloqual universalism State-sponsored indigenous classification Notes
12 3 Religion and Culture: Popular, Indigenous and Hegemonic Indigenous religion is also popular Catholicism The dialectic of the erudite and the popular Bolivia: a crucible for the intellectual, anthropological and political intersections of ethnicity and authenticity Conclusion Notes
13 4 From Popular Culture to the Cultures of the People: Evangelical Christianity as a Challenge to the Decolonial Pentecostalism and neo-Pentecostalism Conclusion Notes
14 Conclusion: Democratizing Democracy The decolonial A discrete universalism Gender Women in religion and social movements After the decolonial Notes
15 References
16 Index
Guide
1 Cover
6 Preface: In the time of COVID
9 Glossary
10 Introduction