My decoloniality is not your decoloniality: the new multiverse - an opinion piece

被引:1
|
作者
Chan, Stephen [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] SOAS Univ London, Dept World Polit, London, England
[2] SOAS Univ London, Law & Social Sci, London, England
来源
SOCIAL DYNAMICS-A JOURNAL OF AFRICAN STUDIES | 2023年 / 49卷 / 02期
关键词
Decoloniality; postcolonial studies; translation; President Xi Jinping; authenticity; hybridity;
D O I
10.1080/02533952.2023.2240151
中图分类号
K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ;
摘要
The term has become a mantra, but "decoloniality" has almost no precise meaning and is used as an ideological trope. It points in a "progressive" sense towards a status quo ante, almost an arcadia descended from an anti-slavery Victorian regret that colonialism had robbed the "native" of his "innocence." It is a term brandished often in African studies, but the imperial outreach impacted most of the world. When China's President Xi Jinping speaks of eroding Western influence, is this a form of decoloniality or a form of chauvinist imposition? If imposition, it all the same draws from a Confucian tradition in which an endless genealogy of Chinese emperors have participated. When Zambia, under the organised umbrella organisation, the United Church of Zambia, brings together both mainstream Christian religions and a host of charismatic religions that have "indigenised" Christianity, is Christianity anymore a colonial project? Is there anything at all in common between Xi and Zambian Christianity? In this essay I object to the laziness of "decoloniality" as a term of righteousness, and argue for complexity, plurality, and a means all the same of speaking together in a common language for international decency and generosity.
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页码:369 / 375
页数:7
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