Bültmann & Gerriets
Refusals and Reinventions
Engendering New Indigenous and Black Life across the Americas
von Daniel Ìgbín'bí Coleman
Verlag: The Ohio State University Press
Taschenbuch
ISBN: 978-0-8142-5904-7
Erschienen am 02.04.2024
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 229 mm [H] x 152 mm [B] x 10 mm [T]
Gewicht: 279 Gramm
Umfang: 186 Seiten

Preis: 37,20 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Klappentext

Daniel Ìgbín'bí Coleman (he/they) is Assistant Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and Affiliate Faculty in Africana Studies at Georgia State University.



In Refusals and Reinventions, artist-scholar-organizer Daniel Coleman considers his critical trajectories and participation in intersectional justice struggles in the US and Mexico, situating them within larger abolitionist and decolonial movements for Black civil rights and Native/Indigenous sovereignty. He identifies how Black and Indigenous people create, exist in, and reclaim many worlds-the pluriverse-through their artistic refusals and reinventions. Coleman thus contributes to a growing body of pluriversal thought, inspired by the Zapatista motto "a world in which many worlds fit." Charting previously unrecognized connections among the creative struggles of Indigenous people in southern Mexico and Black people in the southern United States, Coleman draws on performance praxis, decolonial pedagogies, and Afro-diasporic and Native/Indigenous cosmologies to frame four case studies of people refusing racialized, gendered violences as world-making tools. In looking at creative responses among activists in Chiapas and in North Carolina, Coleman uses transfeminist, Black feminist, and decolonial frameworks to ask: How do creative insurgent practices give us access to our humanity? And what do praxis and engaged witnessing have to teach us about what worlds from the pluriverse hold?