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Call for Applications

Theme: Decolonizing Knowledge and Power
Subtitle: Postcolonial Studies, Decolonial Horizons
Type: International Summer School
Institution: Center of Study and Investigation for Decolonial
Dialogues
Location: Barcelona (Spain)
Date: 2.–12.7.2018
Deadline: 5.2.2018

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The Decolonizing Knowledge and Power Summer School is now accepting
applications through February 5, 2018 for the 2018 program to be held
July 2 - July 12  in Barcelona, Spain.

“Decolonizing Knowledge and Power: Postcolonial Studies, Decolonial
Horizons” is part of a larger intellectual and political initiative
generally referred to as the “modernity/(de)coloniality research
project.” A basic assumption of the project takes knowledge-making,
since the European Renaissance, as a fundamental aspect of
“coloniality” – the process of domination and exploitation of the
Capitalist/Patriarchal/Imperial Western Metropolis over the rest of
the world. “Decolonizing Knowledge and Power” becomes, then, a task
and a process of liberation from assumed principles of knowledge and
understanding of how the world is and should be, as well as from
forms of organizing the economy and political authority.

The world we live today is the result of more than 500 years of
Western colonial expansion and imperial designs. This created a world
system with unequal power relations between the North (including the
North within the South) and the South (including the South within the
North). These global inequalities are produced by racial, class,
gender, sexual, religious, pedagogical, linguistic, aesthetic,
ecological and epistemological power hierarchies that operate in
complex and entangled ways at a world-scale. This
“Western-centric/Christian-centric, capitalist/patriarchal,
heteronormative, modern/colonial world system” denies the epistemic
diversity of the world and pretends to be mono-epistemic. The
Western/Capitalist/Patriarchal tradition of thought is the hegemonic
perspective within the world system with the epistemic privilege to
define for the rest of the world, as part of an imperial universal
design, concepts such as democracy, human rights, economy, feminism,
politics, history, etc. Non-Western traditions of thought are
concomitantly inferiorized and subalternized. This process is
intricately tied to the history of imperial designs such as the
Renaissance and Christianization in the 16th century, the
Enlightenment in the 18th century, Positivism in the 19th and early
part of the 20th century, developmentalism in the mid-20th century,
neo-liberalism in the late 20th century and the imperial project of
“exporting democracy” at the beginning of the 21st century. These
imperial/colonial designs over the past 500 years illustrate over and
over again that modernity is produced on the shoulders of
coloniality, that is, there is no modernity without coloniality.

The international Summer School, “Decolonizing Knowledge and Power,”
aims at enlarging the analysis and investigation of the hidden agenda
of modernity (that is, coloniality) in the sphere of knowledge, power
and being. Who is producing knowledge? What institutions and
disciplines legitimize it? What is knowledge for and who benefits
from it? How is our social existence colonized and how to think about
decolonization of being? What power hierarchies constitute the
cartography of power of the global political-economy we live in and
how to go about decolonizing the world? Decolonizing knowledge and
power as well as de-colonial thinking is the priority of this summer
school.

Our summer institute will question basic assumptions engrained in the
idea of modernity, progress, and development and will encourage
thinking and living in search of non-eurocentric, non-corporate
social and human values. Doubts about such capitalist, patriarchal
and Eurocentric horizons, are also generating distinct horizons of
knowledge and understanding that the seminar will address as
"decolonial horizons."

We will arrive at “decolonial horizons” by following three
interrelated routes: a) embracing epistemic diversity in order to
move beyond the mono-epistemic privilege of the West; b) examining
the different moments of imperial/colonial histories and geographies
in which the West colonized other cultures, civilizations and
historical systems; c) providing a series of basic questions and
concepts to facilitate the decolonization of power, knowledge and
being.

Throughout the seminar we will provide a historical overview of
Western intellectual and political-economic history since the
Renaissance and identify the moments of imperial/colonial relations
of Europe and the US with the rest of the world. Identifying the
historical and geographical moments in which the West entered in
contact with other cultures and civilizations will allow us to locate
diverse decolonial horizons (in North America, Latin America, the
Caribbean, Africa, Middle East and Asia). We will link de-colonial
horizons with the task of devising research projects and educational
transformations required by the diverse growing decolonial
alter-globalisation movements in their struggles for a world beyond
capitalist, imperialist, patriarchal, heterosexist and colonial power
relations.

The basic questions are:

- Who produces and transmits knowledge and understanding?
- What institutions support the production of hegemonic knowledge and
  understanding and why are knowledges and understandings that lack
  support from such institutions not validated as institutional
  knowledge and understanding?
- How do we think about the relation between culture and
  political-economy in complex non-reductive ways?
- What is coloniality of being and how to think about decolonization
  of being?
- What is the cartography of power of the modern/colonial
  Capitalist/Patriarchal World-system and how to re-conceptualize the
  struggles to decolonize and transcend it?

De-colonizing knowledge means then to call into question the
principles that sustain the current dominant knowledge, understanding
and expectation of what society should be like, how social subjects
should behave, what kind of knowledge is accepted as relevant, what
applications receive grants or fellowships, and which knowledge and
understanding is encouraged and which is devalued, silenced or simply
not supported. De-colonizing knowledge means to open up horizons and
visions that are generally denied by mainstream academia and media.

This year's program will include as faculty: Nelson Maldonado-Torres,
Ruthie Gilmore, Salman Sayyid, Ramon Grosfoguel, Linda Alcoff,
Oyeronke Oyewumi, Sabelo Ndlovu and others.

For more information and application please see:
http://www.dialogoglobal.com/barcelona/




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