Decolonial Feminist Genealogies and Futures

Author: Edited by Annie Isabel Fukushima and K. Melchor Quick Hall

Series: Dissident Feminisms

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The editors organize the essays in four thematic sections: subversive labor; spatialities and temporalities; resistance; and genealogies and feminist futures. Inspired by outside catalysts like sharing circles and poetry, the contributors challenge the boundaries of time and space that we imagine as constraints on labor and resistance. Their methodological approaches include participation observation, pláticas, critical participatory action research, spatial analysis, interviews, testimonio, grounded theory, and historical analysis.

Interdisciplinary and diverse, Decolonial Feminist Genealogies and Futures draws on a unique history of thought and action to map a new generation of practices.

Contributors: Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Esther O. Ajayi-Lowo, Ana Carolina Antunes, Xamuel Bañales, Azza Basarudin, Tina Beyene, Linda Carty, Elisa Contreras, Janice Cindy Gaudet, Lynn Hampton, Amanda Jurno, Eun-Jin Keish Kim, Shireen Keyl, Leece Lee-Oliver, Monique Lemos, Xochitl E. López Andrade, Tricia McGuire-Adams, Sylvia Mendoza Aviña, Akanksha Misra, Cueponcaxochitl D. Moreno Sandoval, Bruno Moreschi, Rachel Afi Quinn, K. Melchor Quick Hall, Angel Sutjipto, Miriam G. Valdovinos, and Lydia Zakel

At the Core of Discovery: How Utah’s Research Community Builds Talent and Drives Impact

By Xoel Cardenas, Sr. Communications Specialist, Office of the Vice President for Research

Creatives. Mentors. Leaders. Innovators. Optimists.

These are just some of the words that describe the University of Utah’s research community.

Excerpt:

“Mentoring is an ever-evolving concept, practice, and relationship, where mentors are trusted people who guide a mentee’s process. Mentoring is something we learn not only by doing, but by experiencing it…. Research mentoring is not about individuals, but about a collective commitment to each other and our promise that we can collectively thrive in research environments — peer-mentors, students, staff, faculty, and community, together.” – Annie Isabel Fukushima, Associate Dean, Undergraduate Studies

Read more to learn more about different perspectives on research mentoring at University of Utah

 University of Utah Office of Undergraduate Research University of Utah