Faculty: Walter D. Mignolo  

Walter D. Mignolo
Title: William Hane Wannamaker Distinguished Professor of Romance Studies
Office Location: 125B Friedl Building, Box 90670, Durham, NC 27708
Office Phone: +1 919 668 1949
Email Address: wmignolo@duke.edu
Web Page:
http://waltermignolo.com/
Academic Director and Co-Founder, Duke in the Andes/Duke en la America Andina Director, Center for Global Studies and the Humanities
Office Hours:

Tuesdays and Thursdays by appointment (between 1pm and 3 pm) 

Education:

  • Ph.D., École Pratique des Hautes Études (France), 1974

Research Interests:  

Specialaties: Globalization and Globalism Darker Side of Renaissance and of the Enlightenment World Order Modernity/Coloniality Decolonial Thinking Decolonial Aesthesis Non-European Thinking Capitalism and Economic Coloniality Political Theory and non-Western Governance Dewesternization The academic categories of Scholars@Duke do not reflect neither my work nor my research and teaching interests. But that is what happened when you have to define yourself according to some else categories. They are institutional categories that do not allow for creativity and force you into the box-cage of orthodox scholarship. My work (thinking, writing, researching, teaching, networking) in the past five years (of which I do not foresee its closing yet), has been based, first, on the premise that “research” cannot be an isolated category of intellectual labor. This part was deleted----And secondly has been devoted to unveil the logic of coloniality (a logic of oppression, of expendability of life—“human and nature”-- hidden under the Salvationist rhetoric of modernity. Consequently, my work has been aiming and will continue to aim, to de-colonial projects going on around the world, moving away and disengaging from the belief in that history is one, although it admits diversity of interpretations. There interpretation however than have been silenced and histories that have been discarded by the pervasive work of the coloniality of power, of knowledge and of being. What is going on in South America, in the re-emergent Chicano/Latino/as social movement in the U.S., and around the world are some of the signs of a global and massive shift in the geo- and body-politics of thinking. My work (that is, my thinking), has been oriented and focused on the dangerous celebration of expertise an excellence to the expense of experience, consciousness and thinking (critical for some, de-colonial for others). My concern has been and continued to be that expertise and excellence drives us to a managerial concept and practice of democracy; while experience, consciousness (double consciousness like in Du Bois; mestiza consciousness like in Anzaldúa; the consciousness awakening of Rigoberta Menchú (y así me nació la conciencia); the radical mestizo consciousness Rodolfo Kush, and Argentine philosopher of German descent) are the necessary orientation for a de-colonial shift toward a future of dialogue toward pluri-versality, rather than the monologue toward uni-versality. My latest manuscript, I Am Where I Think: Globalization, Epistemic Disobedience and the De-colonial Option (forthcoming, Duke University Press). Once we realize that “I think, therefore I am” took us (all of us, in the planet) to believe that thinking prevails over existence, experience, consciousness, is just a principle that benefits some and damages many, we learn also that the future couldn’t be imagined and thought out from the legacy of European philosophical and scientific legacies. It is necessary then to take seriously “the geo-politics” and the “body politics of thinking”, that is of places and people who were declared inept to think and to govern by themselves (bodies of color, primitive, barbarians, and places beyond the last stage of history---third world, underdeveloped nations, emergent economies, etc.). This manuscript closes a cycle that started with The Darker Side of the Renaissance: Literacy, Territoriality and Colonization (1995), and continued with Local Histories/Global Designs: Coloniality, Subaltern Knoweldges and Border Thinking (2000). In the next five to ten years, my work will follow to diverse by complimentary path: I have already began to think and write on a trade-book titled Globalization and the Beautiful Life: Las Terrenas, Dominican Republic. Las Terrenas, a small town basically of people from African-descent, with a significant population of Haitian immigrants, is being surrounded by an increasing tourism of European provenance (US prefer Punta Cana), will allow me to look at globalization from the receiving end. Real state business, exploitation of labor, professional prostitution, racism, colonial memories and imperial realities, all combine to make of Las Terrenas one single place to understand the imperial/colonial histories of the Americas and the “beautiful life” that globalization makes possible. The second path, that I have already also started, is the writing of op-eds. The historical processes that we are witnessing in South America (a consequence of the consequences and the beautiful life of neo-liberal globalization since Augusto Pinochet, that pick up in the nineties and collapsed at the beginning of the 21st centuries), are just at the beginning. The debates around Hugo Chávez, Evo Morales, Rafael Correa (to name just the government that are breaking new ground in political theory and political economy, and that are making concrete the possibilities of decolonial options), are already heated and will continue to be. There is, at the same time, a notable disorientation among the general public on what is going on. “Turn to the left” has been the most common expression, and the most clear example that neither the traditional right nor the traditional left (or Marxist persuasion) are at a lost to understand something that is beyond their historical experiences. Here too, expertise is proven limited to understand, from outside and from above, a history that (like the missionaries of the sixteenth centuries), is totally alien to their own experience.

Representative Publications   (More Publications)

Books

  • Mignolo, W. The Darker Side of Western Modernity: Global Futures, Decolonial Options.  Latin America Otherwise Duke University Press, 2011 (408 pages pp.). (http://www.latamrob.com/archives/2551) [ViewProduct.php]  [abs]
  • Mignolo, W. The Idea of Latin America.  Blackwell, 2005 .
  • Mignolo, WD. Epistemischer Ungehorsam. Rhetorik der Moderne, Logik der Kolonialität und Grammatik der Dekolonialität (German Translation).  Verlag Turia + Kant, 2012 (210 pages pp.). Translation into German of "Desobediencia Epistemica", published by Editorial del Signo, Buenos Aires, 2010. (Translated with an introduction, by Jens Katsner and Tom Waibel.) [pdf_3]  [abs]
  • with Mignolo, WD; Tlostanova, M. Learning to Unlearn: Decolonial Reflections from Eurasia and the Americas.  Ohio University Press, 2012 . [pages/tlostanova%20learning.html]
  • Mignolo, WD. El vuelco de la razón: diferencia colonial y pensamiento fronterizo.  Ediciones del Signo and Center for Global Studies and the Humanities, Duke University, 2011 (182 pages pp.). [available here]  [abs]
  • Mignolo, WD. De la hermenéutica y la semiosis colonial al pensar descolonial.  Abya Yala y Universidad Politecnica Salesiana, 2011 (145 pages pp.). (A collection of five articles, in Spanish, from 1983 to 1995 that are the foundation of my major books since ¨The Darker Side of the Renaissance.¨ An introduction by Gustavo Verdesio explains the trajectory.)  [abs]
  • Mignolo, WD. The idea of Latin America (Korean Translation).  Editorial Greenbee, May, 2010 . [articleView.html]
Special Issues
  • Mignolo, WALTER, Globalization and the Decolonial OptionCultural Studies 21:2-3 (2007). [title~content=g776420754~db=all]
  • Walter D. Mignolo, Loci of enunciation and imaginary constructions: The Case of (Latin) AmericaPoetics Today I & II:4 (1995).