There is no global social justice without global cognitive justice. The Global South consists of a constellation of knowledges born in the social struggles against capitalism, colonialism, and patriarchy. Herein lies the foundation for an alternative way of thinking of alternatives.
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"In this exciting collection, the epistemological-rather than the geographical-South emerges in its full political vitality. [...] The authors illustrate the immense cognitive diversity generated through resistance against exclusion, degradation, and nullification-offering models of how we can weave together counter-hegemonic processes of existential and epistemological restitution. They thereby enact the idea of the Global South as both a reality and a 'proposal-in-progress'. This is an invitation to join the necessarily collective, positive, and constructive endeavor of interpreting a diverse and non-relativistic, incomplete, and pluriversal world through fighting to transform it. Don't pass it up!"
Jane Anna Gordon, author of Creolizing Political Theory and Statelessness and Contemporary Enslavement
"This sparkling collection offers a compelling instance of decolonization as ongoing emancipatory practice. Its authors urge us to reboot the modern political imagination by learning with, and from, the South: the South less as geographical than as epistemic space. And as the source of alternative theorizations born of struggle, resistant re-cognition, subaltern cosmopolitanism. The South, in this sense, is both a reality and a 'proposal-in-progress', speaking to emergent political possibilities, plural histories, and hopeful futures."
Jean and John Comaroff, Harvard University
Jane Anna Gordon, author of Creolizing Political Theory and Statelessness and Contemporary Enslavement
"This sparkling collection offers a compelling instance of decolonization as ongoing emancipatory practice. Its authors urge us to reboot the modern political imagination by learning with, and from, the South: the South less as geographical than as epistemic space. And as the source of alternative theorizations born of struggle, resistant re-cognition, subaltern cosmopolitanism. The South, in this sense, is both a reality and a 'proposal-in-progress', speaking to emergent political possibilities, plural histories, and hopeful futures."
Jean and John Comaroff, Harvard University