Decolonial Keywords: South Asian Thoughts and Attitudes

By Renny Thomas and Sasanka Perera

This volume presents a set of keywords and concepts anchored in the region’s languages and its vast cultural landscape. It reiterates specific attitudes, ways of seeing and methods of doing, embedded in the historical and contemporary experiences in South Asia. The words, concepts, ideas, and attitudes in this volume explore the contexts of their production and how their meanings have changed at different historical moments. Individual essays, from across disciplines, argues for the importance in moving away from the intellectual shackles of colonial and neo-colonial experiences while also not succumbing to the traps of local reductionist nativisms and cultural nationalisms.

Find further information here.

Generation Q and Decolonizing Alash

In The Kazakh Spring.

By Diana T. Kudaibergen

This chapter dwells further on the collective solidarity and imagined digital community that the Kazakh Spring was able to bring about. In this chapter, Kudaiberger discusses the use of language, colonial heritage, and the rethinking of its legacy in the context of the nationalizing regime of Nazarbayev. She argues that the constructed divide between the Kazakh- and Russian-speaking political audiences no longer works as a divide for the Kazakh Spring activists, who are actively embracing bilingualism not as an unattainable aspiration but as a living reality of post-independence. Kazakh Spring activists can also be dubbed the ‘Generation Q’ as they strive to return to the Latinization of the Kazakh/Qazaq language. Furthermore, this chapter discusses how activists read the decolonial theory and use it in their activism. The author dwells on why the main slogans, names, and titles of their projects come from the oeuvre of the Kazakh pre-Soviet movement of Alash and its writers and how these well-known discourses are changed and adapted to the contemporary Qazaq realities. She finally explores how the Kazakh Spring as a field allows the rethinking of the nationalistic stigma that remained a Soviet legacy.

Access this chapter here.

Symptomspeak: Women’s Struggle for History and Health in Post-War Kosovo

By Hanna Kienzler

Can we feel the pain of others? How does pain connect and reach across histories, gendered realities, and social politics? How is illness shaped by context, and what kind of life worlds rise from it? Symptomspeak explores these questions among women in Kosovo and discovered a unique symptomatic language through which they communicate their pain and suffering about the Kosovo War and post-war hardships. Dr. Kienzler calls this language Symptomspeak.

Through her posts, she explores three main themes: Remembering War and Hardship; Speaking through Pain; Realms of Healing.

Discover her blog here.

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