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1. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Eduardo Mendieta, Jeffrey Paris

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the post-colonial atlantic

2. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Nelson Maldonado-Torres

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Aimé Césaire’s Discourse on Colonialism is central to the project of decoloniality. It is a critical reflection on the European civilization project that gives expression to the disenchantment with European modernity that began to be felt in many places after the Second World War. This essay describes the overcoming of Cartesian reason through the “decolonial gift,” which makes possible an opening toward transmodernity, an alternate response or pathway in view of the declining geo-political and epistemological significance of Europe and the United States.
3. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
George Ciccariello-Maher

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This paper approaches the importance of the colonial difference through a discussion of the debate between Sartre and Foucault on the proper role of the intellectual. The existentialist emphasis on the situation—and the concomitant imperative for intellectual totalization—would lead Sartre to a more sophisticated and radical understanding of his own situation as a European intellectual. This development was largely driven by Fanon, who would push Sartre’s understanding of the gaze toward recognizing the centrality of decolonization, and thereby of an alter-humanism which envisions itself as resolving the aporias of the European intellectual.
4. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
John R. Martin, Jr.

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Social conditions of race and class continue to combine in ways that raise systemic questions about the adequacy and legitimacy of liberal, capitalist democracy in America. More radical alternatives, however, are still generally held to be irrelevant in the American context. The following is an effort to correct this widespread misrepresentation of socialism’s relevance to America generally, and to matters of race in particular. I consider the work of C.L.R. James who, fifty years ago, developed a class-oriented, explicitly Marxist theory in which the aspirations and struggles of African-Americans were given a central place, both analytically and politically.

book reviews

5. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
David Ingram

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6. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Nic Veroli

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7. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Caroline Arruda

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8. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2

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9. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2

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