Reframing central categories in Western critical thought, this book
investigates the relationship between capitalism and coloniality in
society and education, and reconceptualizes emancipatory theory and
pedagogy in response. De Lissovoy exposes a logic of violation at the
heart of capitalist accumulation and argues that we need to attend to
ontological and epistemological orders of domination within which
subjectivity takes shape. Systematically bridging the theoretical
traditions of Marxism, Latin American decolonial thought, and critical
pedagogy, De Lissovoy shows how a new critical imaginary can reorder
curriculum in schools and other educational spaces, organize a form of
learning beyond the capitalist imperatives of imposition and
exploitation, and reconstruct pedagogical relationships in the mode of a
decolonial and democratic commons.