Aquilombar Democracy Fugitive Routes from the End of the World
Author(s) -
Juliana Moreira Streva
Publication year - 2021
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.46877/streva.2021.37
Subject(s) - embodied cognition , territoriality , democracy , colonialism , sociology , history , political science , aesthetics , epistemology , law , art , archaeology , philosophy , communication , politics
This working paper approaches the current global crisis as a potential territoriality for radicalizing concepts and for learning with ongoing fugitive routes. Through nonlinear paths, I aim to examine the contours of the quilombo not only as a slavery-past event but as a continuum of anti-colonial struggle that invokes other forms of re-existence and convivial coexistence in Brazil. In doing that, this research draws attention to an Améfrica Ladina epistemology and a decolonial methodology embodied by living archives and oral histories.
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