decoloniality
Lara and Stephen Sheehi
In this podcast, Lebanese writers, researchers and activists Lara and Stephen Sheehi walk us through the day-to-day reality of psychoanalysis under occupation, Zionist psy-ops and (anti)oppressive praxis. They talk about psychological warfare and about Sumud—or the reverie of resistance—, and discuss the worldliness of our subjectivities in a world that is not the same for everyone.
Adom Getachew
In this podcast, political theorist Adom Getachew walks us through the histories of Garveyism, the dynamism of music and political speech, an inward-facing politics of self-transformation, and what decoloniality might mean beyond the mere insertion or inclusion of voices into structures that ultimately re-center existing forms of power. From Garveyite schools of “educating allocution” to the broadcast traditions of anticolonial movements, she explores how power travels not only through institutions and treaties, but through sound—through the ways communities cultivate a collective voice when paper is too costly, borders too rigid, and histories too fractured. Her reflections remind us that political transformation is always collaborative, always practiced in relation, and shaped by those who find ways to speak even when they are not handed a stage.
Carol Stampone
In this podcast, Brazilian writer and organizer Carol Stampone speaks about writing as her first experience of belonging, motherhood as a deeply transformative and often traumatic process, and the politics of empathy and compassion. She reflects on the importance of asking better questions rather than seeking definitive answers, inviting us to stay with uncertainty, to think with others, and to imagine forms of living, caring, and creating that remain open, relational, and unfinished.
Javier García Fernández
In this podcast, Javier García Fernández uses the three dimensions of coloniality – the coloniality of knowledge, of power, and of being – to think about what it might mean to decolonise Spain and Europe from its margins. He has coined the concept of pensar jondo – a kind of thinking that draws on flamenco cante jondo or ‘deep song’, on the social struggles of rural Andalusia and the anarchism of day labourers, and on the diasporas to Catalonia and Europe – to interpret Andalusia as a laboratory of the internal coloniality of the Spanish state: a land marked by dispossession, forced migration and fascist violence, but also by radical forms of community, cooperation and resistance. From that point, he considers how to develop political alliances that can tackle the rise of fascism today.
Rolando Vázquez Melken
In this podcast, we go into listening mode with Rolando Vázquez Melken. He proposes countering the modern-colonial aesthetic—the one that organises representation and governs our bodies and our gazes—by liberating aesthesis, or reopening the field of the sensible. The idea is to make space for other ways of seeing, listening, feeling, and living. To make room for ancestral knowledge and forms that have been historically erased, subordinated, or appropriated by the modern regime. Here, decolonial thought operates as a practice, a battlefield, an approach that walks alongside other forms of struggle and rings out in many voices: both ancestral voices and the voices that are still forging a path in the present, such as those of Walter Mignolo, María Lugones, Enrique Dussel, Gloria Wekker, and Catherine Walsh, to name just a few.