This collection offers a broad range of Spivak's recent essays,
lectures, and other writings that speak to her groundbreaking work in
feminism, deconstruction, Marxism, and subaltern studies.
The pieces collected in Spivak Moving touch on a variety of topics,
including her crucial thinking on pan-Africanism and W. E. B. DuBois,
reproductive heteronormativity, art and film, class apartheid in
education, practices of institutional critique, and the training of
imaginative activism through a sustained engagement with the humanities.
She moves from a look at the unsystematized first languages of
continental Africa into a broader consideration of human rights,
international civil society practice, the question of terror, the
"freedom" of the academic, and the place of the digital. About half the
essays are collected here for the first time and are not found in
Spivak's several published essay collections.