Zeitschrift | Ausgabe

Theory, Culture & Society 39 (2022), 6

The paper has two complementary objectives. First, it sustains an analysis of the concept of ‘coloniality’ that accounts for the epistemic imbalance in the modern world, demonstrating precisely how Africa is adversely affected, having been caught up in the throes of coloniality and its epistemic implications. Second – and complementarily – the paper attempts to bring this very concept of ‘coloniality’ into the discourse on Africa’s emigration crisis, arguing that Africa’s emigration crisis is traceable, inter alia, to the epistemic imbalance in the very structure of modernity. This imbalance results from the stifling of Africa’s epistemic resources under Western epistemic hegemony. Epistemic coloniality, of course interacting with some material factors, creates a sufficient condition for emigration. It is further theorized that the apparent lack of epistemic will on the part of Africans to mobilize some surviving epistemic resources to address some problems on their own is also a function of coloniality.

CONTENT

Coloniality, Epistemic Imbalance, and Africa’s Emigration Crisis
Donald Mark C. Ude
pp. 3–19

Decolonial and Ontological Challenges in Social and Anthropological Theory
Jairo I. Fúnez-Flores
pp. 21–41

The Politics of Clinic and Critique in Southern Brazil
Dominique P. Béhague
pp. 43–61

Moral Injury and the Psyche of Counterinsurgency
Kenneth MacLeish
pp. 63–86

Baudrillard and Heidegger: Between Two Deaths
Vanessa Anne-Cecile Freerks
pp. 87–104

Rethinking Human-Smartphone Interaction with Deleuze, Guattari, and Polanyi
Nicholas Fazio
pp. 105–120

Love, Games and Gamification: Gambling and Gaming as Techniques of Modern Romantic Love
Lee Mackinnon
pp. 121–137

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