Thinking against empire: anticolonial thought as social theory
- Authors: Go J.1
- 
							Affiliations: 
							- University of Chicago
 
- Issue: No 1 (2024)
- Pages: 15-27
- Section: THEORY. METHODOLOGY
- URL: https://cardiosomatics.ru/0132-1625/article/view/673641
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.31857/S0132162524010028
- ID: 673641
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Abstract
Sociology was born in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a project in, of, and for empire. This essay excavates a tradition of social thought that grew alongside metropolitan sociology but has been marginalized by it: anticolonial thought. Emerging from anticolonial movements, writers and thinkers, anticolonial thought in 19th and 20th centuries emerged from a variety of thinkers (from indigenous activists in the Americas to educated elites in the American, Francophone and British colonies). I argue that this body of thought offers distinct visions of society, social relations, and social structure, along with generative analytic approaches to the social self, social solidarity and global relations – among other themes. Anticolonial thought offers the basis for an alternative canon and corpus of sociological thinking to which we might turn as we seek to revitalize and decolonize sociology.
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	                        About the authors
Julian Go
University of Chicago
							Author for correspondence.
							Email: jgo34@uchicago.edu
				                					                																			                								
Professor of Sociology
United States, ChicagoReferences
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