Decolonial theories: origin, categories, and critical intents

dc.creatorPachón Soto, Damiánes
dc.creatorTorres Tafúr, Karen Yolimaes
dc.date2023-05-29
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-05T16:34:46Z
dc.date.available2025-02-05T16:34:46Z
dc.descriptionThis paper presents the epistemic and political proposal of the Modernity/ Coloniality group. I display the conformation of the group, its members and principal conceptual and theoretical elaborations. The essay exposes with thoroughness the contribution of collective Modernity/Coloniality, in special, its critic of modernity and the epistemic colonialism which Europe and the named First World has put under the “periphery”es
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.identifierhttps://revistas.usantotomas.edu.co/index.php/analisis/article/view/8603
dc.identifier10.15332/21459169.8603
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11634/60723
dc.languagespa
dc.publisherUniversidad Santo Tomás, Bogotá, Colombiaes
dc.relationhttps://revistas.usantotomas.edu.co/index.php/analisis/article/view/8603/7809
dc.rightsDerechos de autor 2022 Universidad Santo Tomáses
dc.rightshttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0es
dc.sourceAnalisis; Vol. 55 No. 102 (2023)en
dc.sourceAnálisis; Vol. 55 Núm. 102 (2023)es
dc.sourceAnalisis; v. 55 n. 102 (2023)pt-BR
dc.source2145-9169
dc.source0120-8454
dc.subjectGroup Modernity/Colonialityen
dc.subjectcolonialismen
dc.subjectEnrique Dusselen
dc.subjectWalter Mignoloen
dc.subjectAnibal Quijanoen
dc.subjectArturo Escobaren
dc.subjectepistemicen
dc.titleDecolonial theories: origin, categories, and critical intentses
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

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