On a second wave of anti-colonial revolutions.
State and Capital reign over the Age of Sorrow. We face inequality, pandemics, ethnocide, climate crisis, and mass extinction. Our desire for security and power governs us as State. Our desire for possessions governs us as Capital. Our desires imprison and rule us beings as Unbeing. Yet, from Nagaland to New Zealand, Bhutan to Bolivia, a second wave of anti-colonial revolutions has begun. Arising from assemblies of humans and other-than-humans, these revolutions replace possessive individualism with non-exploitative interdependence. Naga elders, Bhutanese herders and other indigenous communities, feminists, poets, seers, yaks, cranes, vultures, and fungi haunt this pamphlet. The original Subaltern Studies narrated how Indian peasant communities destroyed the British empire. Subaltern Studies 2.0 prophesies the multi-being demos and liberates Being from Unbeing. Re-kin, Re-nomad, Re-animate, Re-wild! The Animist Revolution has come.
SUBALTERN STUDIES 2.0
AUTOR/A
SPIVAK, GAYATRI CHAKRAVORTY
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (Calcuta, 1942) es Avalon Foundation Professor in the Humanities en la Universidad de Columbia (Nueva York) y doctora honoris causa por las universidades de Toronto, Londres y Oberlin College. Es autora, entre otros trabajos, de la traducción e introducción crítica de "De la grammatologie" de Jacques Derrida (1976); "Thinking Academic Freedom in Gendered Post-Coloniality" (1993), "In Other Worlds" (1987) o "Outside in the Teaching Machine" (1993). En Akal ha publicado su magna obra Crítica de la razón poscolonial (2010) y "Otras Asias" (2011).<BR>Su ensayo «Can the Subaltern speak?» (1988) ya se ha convertido en un texto clásico y fundamental de los estudios poscoloniales. También ha realizado numerosas traducciones desde el bengalí al inglés, entre las que se cuentan los libros de Mahasweta Devi, Imaginary Maps (1994); Breast Stories (1997), Old Women (1999) y Chotti Munda and His Arrow (2002); así como la traducción del místico bengalí del siglo XVIII Ramproshad Sen, Song for Kali (2000).



