Walter Mignolo
William Hane Wannamaker Distinguished Professor of Romance Studies
Mignolo’s research and teaching have been devoted, in the past 30 years, to understanding and unraveling the historical foundation of the modern/colonial world system and imaginary since 1500. In his research, modern/colonial world system and imaginary is tantamount with the historical foundation of Western Civilization and its expansion around the globe. His research stands on four basic premises: a) the there is no world-system before 1500 and the integration of America in the Western Christian (European) imaginary; b) that the world-system generated the idea of “newness” (the New World) and of modernity and c) that there is no modernity without coloniality—coloniality is constitutive no derivative of modernity; d) the modern/colonial imaginary was mounted and maintained on the invention of the Human and Humanity that provided the point of reference for the invention of racism and sexism together with the invention of nature.
Briefly stated, Mignolo’s research has been and continues to be devoted to exposing modernity/coloniality as a machine that generates and maintains un-justices and to exploring decolonial ways of delinking from the modernity/coloniality. Because the political dimension of his work, in the past fifteenth years Mignolo’s energy has been increasingly devoted to the public sphere working with artists, curators, and with journalists, writing op-eds and giving frequent interviews in English and Spanish, co-organizing and co-teaching Summer Schools in Middelburg, Bremen, and at UNC-Duke. He is also frequently delivering workshops for faculty and graduate students in South and Central America, Asia, and Europe.
Mignolo was awarded the Katherine Singer Kovaks prize (MLA) for The darker side of the renaissance: literacy, territoriality and colonization (1996) and the Frantz Fanon Prize by the Caribbean Philosophical Association for The Idea of Latin America (2006). His work has been translated into German, Italian, French, Swedish, Rumanian, Spanish, Portuguese, Mandarin, and Korean. He is an Honorary Research Associate for CISA (Center for Indian Studies in South Africa), Wits University at Johannesburg. Recently, he has joined the Dialogue of Civilizations (DOC) Program Council as a senior adviser and was distinguished with an Honoris Causa degree in the Humanities (Filosofia y Letras) by the Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Education
- Ph.D., Ecole Des Hautes Etudes (France) 1974
Mignolo, W. “Lectures notes on Latin American Culture.” Caravelle, vol. 17, 1971.
Mignolo, W., and Jorge Aguilar Mora. “Borges el libro y la escritura.” Ceravelle, 1971, pp. 187–94.
Mignolo, W. “Boquitas pintadas (M. Puig).” Caravelle, vol. 15, 1970.
Mignolo, W. “El amor, los orsinis y la muerte (N. Sanchez).” Caravelle, vol. 15, 1970.
Mignolo, W. “Islamophobia/Hispanophobia: The (re)Configuration of the Racial Imperial/Colonial Matrix.” Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self Knowledge, vol. 1, pp. 13–28.
Mignolo, Walter. “Emergencia, Espacio, "Mundos Posibles": Las Propuestas Epistemológicas de Jorge L. Borges.” Revista Iberoamericana, vol. 43, no. 100, University Library System, University of Pittsburgh, pp. 357–79. Crossref, doi:10.5195/reviberoamer.1977.3547. Full Text
Mignolo, Walter. “Aspectos del Cambio Literario (A Propósito de la Historia de la novela hispanoamericana de Cedomil Goié).” Revista Iberoamericana, vol. 42, no. 94, University Library System, University of Pittsburgh, pp. 31–49. Crossref, doi:10.5195/reviberoamer.1976.3075. Full Text
Pages
Mignolo, W. “Sobre la diferencia colonial, o acerca de la emergencia de un pensamiento quo no ha sido considerado como tal: Entrevista con Walter Mignolo (In preparation).” Foreign Sensibilities, Fernando Gómez.
co-editor, Walter D. Mignolo, et al. Re-reading the Black Legend. The Discourses of Religion and Racial Differences in the European Renaissance. Edited by Margaret Greer et al., Chicago University Press.