Eurozine Authors

Latest Articles


04.07.2008
Rámon Grosfoguel

Transmodernity, border thinking, and global coloniality

Decolonizing political economy and postcolonial studies

Postmodernism as an epistemological project still reproduces a particular form of coloniality. A decolonial perspective requires a broader canon of thought that would require taking seriously the epistemic insights of critical thinkers from the global South. [ more ]

03.07.2008
Tomas Kavaliauskas

The non-efficient citizen

01.07.2008
Eurozine News Item

New partner: Res Publica Nowa

30.06.2008
Richard Rorty

Democracy and philosophy

27.06.2008
Ivaylo Ditchev

Mobile citizenship?


New Issues


04.07.2008

Multitudes | 33 (2008)

philosophie politique : les deux corps du monstre
03.07.2008

2000 | 5/2008

Eurozine Review


24.06.2008
Eurozine Review

We, the President

"Le Monde diplomatique" (Berlin) enjoys the view from Slovenia's presidential balcony; "Krytyka" debates genocide; "Osteuropa" compiles a green book on eastern Europe; "Vikerkaar" revisits the Bronze Soldier debate; "Merkur" is wary of the Left's use of opinion polls; "Roots" poses the Macedonian question; "L'Homme" thematizes caring and fighting women; and "Esprit" watches the world in a hurry.

03.06.2008
Eurozine Review

Olympic indifference

20.05.2008
Eurozine Review

Misunderstanding '68

29.04.2008
Eurozine Review

The centre is everywhere

15.04.2008
Eurozine Review

A mother since birth?


http://www.monde-diplomatique.de/
http://www.monde-diplomatique.de/atlas
http://www.istanbulseminars.org
http://translate.eipcp.net/

My Eurozine


If you want to be kept up to date, you can subscribe to Eurozine's rss-newsfeed or our Newsletter.

Authors

Violeta Davoliute

is a member of the Centre for Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto.



Eurozine Articles


Violeta Davoliute, Natalie Zemon Davis

Babel is not the last word

A conversation with Natalie Zemon Davis

"What I care about is having found ways to get evidence for and tell the stories of people often passed unnoticed or treated as a statistic -- to make their stories speak to bigger issues in historical life and change." [more]

28.07.2005



powered by publick.net