|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Indigeneity and Decolonization in the Bolivian Andes: Ritual
Practice and Activism explores how Evo Morales's victory in the
2005 Bolivian presidential elections led to indigeneity as the core
of decolonization politics. Anders Burman analyzes how indigenous
Aymara ritual specialists are essential in representing this
indigeneity in official state ceremony and in legitimizing the
president's role as "the indigenous president." This book goes
behind the scenes of state-sponsored multiculturalist ritual
practices and explores the political, spiritual and existential
dimensions underpinning them.
Indigeneity and Decolonization in the Bolivian Andes: Ritual
Practice and Activism explores how Evo Morales's victory in the
2005 Bolivian presidential elections led to indigeneity as the core
of decolonization politics. Anders Burman analyzes how indigenous
Aymara ritual specialists are essential in representing this
indigeneity in official state ceremony and in legitimizing the
president's role as "the indigenous president." This book goes
behind the scenes of state-sponsored multiculturalist ritual
practices and explores the political, spiritual and existential
dimensions underpinning them.
An underlying assumption undergirding institutions of higher
education is that they serve as a means to upward socioeconomic
mobility and, in turn, a way to address poverty that is tied to
certain racialized/sexualized bodies. Although the education crisis
is not an American or European problem in the geographic sense, but
instead a global problem that plays itself out differentially
across space and time, this volume focuses on the westernized
university, in the US and abroad. It asks questions about what is
westernized about the university, what its aims are, and how those
who work in, through and outside these sites of knowledge
production-with local or global social movements-can participate in
the slow, careful process of decolonizing the westernized
university. Decolonizing the Westernized University: Interventions
in Philosophy of Education from Within and Without provides a
sharper understanding of the crisis and the responses to the
westernized university at multiple sites around the world. As an
intervention in the philosophy of education discourse, which tends
to assume the university is a neutral space, this collection will
be of particular value to students and scholars working in
philosophy of education, Latina/o philosophy, Africana philosophy,
social epistemology, education, cultural studies, and ethnic
studies, as well as to intellectual activists in the United States,
south of the border, and around the world.
|
|