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Creolization

2021
The process of creolization is linked to the movements of globalization that have occurred with the processes of colonization since the seventeenth century. Populations were displaced and disseminated, and their social and cultural worlds coexisted with new ones, often intermingling.
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Creolization

2001
Contains fulltext : 171540.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)
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Creolization

2020
Creolization is a key concept in studies of cultural change in colonial conditions. Most typically, it refers to a mode of cultural transformation undertaken by people from different cultural groups who converge in a colonial territory to which they have not previously belonged.
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Creolizing Transylvania

History of the Present, 2020
AbstractThis article analyzes the differences and overlaps between the dynamics of coloniality and inter-imperiality that have shaped Transylvania since the sixteenth century vis-à-vis neighboring European peripheries and shifting cores, zooming in on how the tensions between different modes of colonial and imperial rule play out in rural settings.
Manuela Boatcă, Anca Parvulescu
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Creolizing Europe

2015
Creolizing Europe critically interrogates creolization as the decolonial, rhizomatic thinking necessary for understanding the cultural and social transformations set in motion through trans/national dislocations. Exploring the usefulness, transferability, and limitations of creolization for thinking post/coloniality, raciality and othering not only as ...
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Creolizing Sartre

2023
Jean-Paul Sartre’s work has been taken up by writers outside of Europe, particularly in the Global South, who have developed phenomenological and existential analyses of racism, colonialism, and other structures of domination. Sartre’s philosophical concepts are fundamentally open, for instance his notions of humanism, bad-faith, and freedom.
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Creolizing Cosmopolitics:

2016
This chapter explores the possibility of using the reconceptualized notion of groundless ground as a new framework from which to envision a new form of self, of thinking and inhabiting the world, differently. A comparative reading of Glissant’s poetic, a poetic of resistance he calls “forced poetic,” and of continental philosophers’ theopoetic (Derrida,
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Creolization/Créolité

2023
“Creole”/“criollo” emerged within European colonialism in the Caribbean, Latin America, the southeastern United States (and Alaska), island groups off the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Africa, mainland regions on that continent (including Sierra Leone, Equatorial Guinea, Angola, and Mozambique), in the former Portuguese/Dutch colonies in South Asia ...
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