- Teacher: Ron Barrett
Macalester Moodle
Search results: 2044

This is a team-taught class that combines sociology and anthropology decolonial theories to provide a critical examination of global perspectives that tend to be associated with modern institutions that emerge in the Global North. More importantly, through a decolonizing lens, we will delve into an alternative understanding of the global rooted in the perspective of the Global South and discuss its liberatory possibilities. To better grasp the “coloniality of power” (Quijano 2000) we will focus on how this is manifested in intergovernmental organizations like the United Nations and educational and arts institutions. The course will introduce students to subaltern practices and movements in the Global South that have the potential to unsettle the Western hegemony that dominates international organizations, and the fields of education and the arts in the Global North. A decolonial approach to global perspectives also requires an inquiry into the cultural and racial differences embedded in local-global contexts. Finally, the course will allow students to learn new ways of thinking about power, responsibility, and ethics in the context of globalization, and become aware of organizing experiences that have engaged in decolonization processes.
- Teacher: Erika Busse-Cárdenas
- Teacher: Olga González
- Teacher: Vanessa Phelan

- Teacher: Johan Arsene Azambou Ndongmo
- Teacher: Will Mitchell
- Teacher: Shengyuan Wang
- Teacher: Michael Anderson
- Teacher: Jerald Dosch
- Teacher: Taran Palli
- Teacher: Claire Wiley
- Teacher: Michael Anderson
- Teacher: Stotra Chakrabarti
- Teacher: Jerald Dosch
- Teacher: Ross Shields
- Teacher: Valentin Solachau-Chamutouski
- Teacher: Amanda Wolfson
