In this essay, I question the philosophical appropriation of the “street”; much recent critical theory fixes on the “events” of the street as portending ruptural becomings—into being—of the new in the world. I argue that such readings of the “extraordinary” are founded upon a heroic ontologic–epistemology of “abandonment–resurrection” that defines colonial–modern Eurocentric philosophy. Against this preoccupation with the extraordinary, I present a view that reads in the events of the street the ordinariness of the perceived extraordinary and the extraordinariness of the (often invisible) ordinary decoloniality of the everyday as the site of already being otherwise
Kant is widely regarded as a fierce critic of colonialism. In Toward Perpetual Peace and the Metaphy...
In this review article I closely read the recently published book African Philosophical and Literary...
This article argues that colonial modernity birthed the police as a world-shaping force that came to...
In this essay, I question the philosophical appropriation of the “street”; much recent critical theo...
This essay presents a view of thinking – of the doing of philosophy - as a praxis of anti-colonial e...
Chabani Manganyi’s long-neglected (2018) essay “Making strange” demonstrates how many of the most in...
I draw first on Vivek Chibber's argument that postcolonial studies fails to provide an adequate basi...
This paper was presented as part of Rethinking the Postcolonial in the Age of the War on Terror join...
"World Literature and Dissent reconsiders the role of dissent in the contemporary aesthetics of glob...
This article traces a conversation around how to theorise and approach the inclusion of experiences,...
The world of academic philosophy is now entering a new age, one defined neither by colonial need for...
This review essay is a response to the graduate seminar on Cosmopolitan Anthropology convened by Kri...
This essay addresses the ‘state of qualitative inquiry’ twice; first, as an allegory of a contempor...
peer-reviewedIn this essay (a revision of my contribution at the closing session of the Imaginaries ...
Fleur Johns argues that the contraposition of a ‘bottom-up’ approach of politics of prototypical tec...
Kant is widely regarded as a fierce critic of colonialism. In Toward Perpetual Peace and the Metaphy...
In this review article I closely read the recently published book African Philosophical and Literary...
This article argues that colonial modernity birthed the police as a world-shaping force that came to...
In this essay, I question the philosophical appropriation of the “street”; much recent critical theo...
This essay presents a view of thinking – of the doing of philosophy - as a praxis of anti-colonial e...
Chabani Manganyi’s long-neglected (2018) essay “Making strange” demonstrates how many of the most in...
I draw first on Vivek Chibber's argument that postcolonial studies fails to provide an adequate basi...
This paper was presented as part of Rethinking the Postcolonial in the Age of the War on Terror join...
"World Literature and Dissent reconsiders the role of dissent in the contemporary aesthetics of glob...
This article traces a conversation around how to theorise and approach the inclusion of experiences,...
The world of academic philosophy is now entering a new age, one defined neither by colonial need for...
This review essay is a response to the graduate seminar on Cosmopolitan Anthropology convened by Kri...
This essay addresses the ‘state of qualitative inquiry’ twice; first, as an allegory of a contempor...
peer-reviewedIn this essay (a revision of my contribution at the closing session of the Imaginaries ...
Fleur Johns argues that the contraposition of a ‘bottom-up’ approach of politics of prototypical tec...
Kant is widely regarded as a fierce critic of colonialism. In Toward Perpetual Peace and the Metaphy...
In this review article I closely read the recently published book African Philosophical and Literary...
This article argues that colonial modernity birthed the police as a world-shaping force that came to...