Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's landmark essay in decolonial thought is
animated for a new generation with art by Estefanía Peñafiel Loaiza
In 1985, Indian scholar Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (born 1942) published
what would become a landmark essay in the academic study of colonialism.
"Can the Subaltern Speak?" interrogates the obstructions that prevent
certain subjects from being heard and how this state-enforced silence
maintains the degradation of those at the peripheries of society. Over
three decades later, Spivak's piece is perhaps even more compelling in
its affirmation of Marxism's relevance to contemporary decolonial
thought. This volume revives Spivak's text for yet another generation of
thinkers, placed in dialogue with artwork by Ecuadorian artist Estefanía
Peñafiel Loaiza (born 1978). Loaiza's preoccupation with questions of
occlusion and the need for and absence of image makes for an art series
that shares a clear kinship with Spivak's line of reasoning. Loaiza's
visual vocabulary echoes and refracts the central ideas put forth by
Spivak in a compelling new interpretation of this essential text.