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Sobre a decolonialidade negra marxista




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Sobre a decolonialidade negra marxista. (2022). Tabula Rasa, 42, 97-122. https://doi.org/10.25058/20112742.n42.04

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Sabelo J. Ndlovu Gatsheni Autor
Morgan Ndlovu Autor

Sabelo J. Ndlovu Gatsheni,

Ph.D. Historia, University of Zimbabwe.


Morgan Ndlovu,

Profesor en el Departamento de Antropología y Estudios sobre el Desarrollo.


Este artigo analisa a complementaridade do marxismo (a versão democrática do século XXI) e a decolonização (a decolonialidade radical do século XXI) como teorias vivas e ideias verdadeiras de liberação. Centra-se nas articulações do marxismo e a liberação negra feitas por figuras seletas como Aimé Cesaire, Abdel Khaliq Mahgoub, Amílcar Cabral e Walter Rodney. Tais figuras produziram o que aqui se apresenta como decolonialidade marxista negra. No centro desta decolonialidade marxista negra encontram-se as intersecções do marxismo e a decolonialização para aprofundar na análise do capitalismo e o colonialismo como fontes inextricavelmente entrelaçadas de problemas modernos. Não só se estica o marxismo ortodoxo para refletir sobre a condição Negra mas, também, se democratiza para abri-lo e abranger outros movimentos de liberação antirracistas, antiescravistas, anticapitalistas, anticoloniais e sexistas anti-heteropatriarcais. A decolonização do século XX também se entende além de sua captura pelas elites burguesas que quiseram substituir os colonialistas brancos sem modificar o sistema-mundo moderno com suas hierarquias raciais e sua ideologia de gênero.


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