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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:The Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs' Comparative Politics/
 International Relations Series presents Oumar Ba. This project proposes a 
 critique of the decolonial turn and seeks to (re)center the ontological gr
 ounding of decolonization not only as a political process\, but as praxis 
 of materiality and national liberation. The paper foregrounds the archives
  of anticolonial struggle for liberation. Doing so\, I revisit one pivotal
  episode at the junction between communism and the anticolonial movement i
 n interwar Europe: Lamine Senghor and the 1927 Brussels congress of the Le
 ague against Imperialism. Ultimately\, the article contends that decoloniz
 ation\, as theorized and articulated by African voices\, in the 20th centu
 ry\, highlights the material grounding of anticolonial theory and praxis\,
  a generative (archival) site built around solidarism\, humanism\, and uni
 versalism.&nbsp\;
DTEND:20221014T173000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T213427Z
DTSTART:20221014T160000Z
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SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Towards a Decolonial U-Turn: Lamine Senghor and the League Against 
 Imperialism in Interwar Europe
UID:RFCALITEM639141176674863408
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>The Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs' C
 omparative Politics/International Relations Series presents Oumar Ba. This
  project proposes a critique of the decolonial turn and seeks to (re)cente
 r the ontological grounding of decolonization not only as a political proc
 ess\, but as praxis of materiality and national liberation. The paper fore
 grounds the archives of anticolonial struggle for liberation. Doing so\, I
  revisit one pivotal episode at the junction between communism and the ant
 icolonial movement in interwar Europe: Lamine Senghor and the 1927 Brussel
 s congress of the League against Imperialism. Ultimately\, the article con
 tends that decolonization\, as theorized and articulated by African voices
 \, in the 20th century\, highlights the material grounding of anticolonial
  theory and praxis\, a generative (archival) site built around solidarism\
 , humanism\, and universalism.</p><p>&nbsp\;</p>
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