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Examining ‘Latinidad’ in Latin America: race, ‘Latinidad’ and the decolonial option

journal contribution
posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by Eugenia Demuro
This article provides a critical account of the idea of race, conceived of and derived from European colonisers in the New World. The paper argues that race became a crucial category to the colonising projects of the New World, and in particular in the distribution of power during colonialism. The paper further examines how the notion of Latinidad (Latinity), entrenched in the term Latin America, continued to enact a discourse of racial superiority/inferiority even after the battles for Independence had taken place. Employing the critical vocabulary and framework of Decolonial theory, the paper introduces key arguments against Western European universality, and calls for a re-reading of the processes that structure privilege across racial and ethnic lines.

History

Journal

Critical race and whiteness studies

Volume

8

Issue

2

Season

Special issue : Directions and Intersections

Pagination

1 - 11

Publisher

Australian Critical Race &​ Whiteness Studies Association

Location

Sydney, NSW

ISSN

1832-3898

eISSN

1838-8310

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2012, Australian Critical Race &​ Whiteness Studies Association

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