Terms
Other terms
more terms
still terms?
Yes terms
100

Biopiracy:

The appropriation of biological resources or traditional knowledge from indigenous/local communities (often through patents) without adequate consent or compensation. Contested through mechanisms like Geographical Indication.

100

Anti-Theological Thought

Rejects the idea that history moves to a predetermined fate.

100

Securitization

When social or political issues are reframed as security threats. Children of Men, the migrants.

100

Bare Life, and who said it

Agamben: refers to people who have biological life but lack any meaningful political rights or protections. Children of Men.

100

Primitive Accumulation

A Marxist concept describing the historical process by which landless laborers were created as a precondition for capitalism. Includes enclosure of commons, slavery, and dispossession of indigenous populations—key to understanding colonialism's economic function.



200

Mcdonaldization

George Ritzer's concept: the spread of fast-food production principles (efficiency, calculability, predictability, control) to all sectors of society. Represents the homogenizing tendency of globalization.

200

Pastiche

Imitation, borrowing, or combination from styles or history. defining feature of Post-modernism.

200

Speculation

Acting despite uncertainty in the future. Organizations make judgements despite knowing what is going to happen.

200

third cinema

A revolutionary film movement theorized by Solanas, Getino, and Espinosa in the late 1960s-70s in Latin America and Cuba. Opposed to Hollywood (First Cinema) and European art cinema (Second Cinema). Aimed to be a weapon of liberation for colonized and oppressed peoples.

200

“moral hazard” in slums :

Poor people are forced to take the responsibility for the poorness, blame the individual not the structure.

300

Cathexis:

Emotional investment or attachment to a person or object

300
Who wrote Black faces, White masks?

Frantz Fanon

300

Modernity as rupture

The foundational idea of Modernism: that contemporary conditions represent such a decisive break with the past that new cultural forms and orientations are necessary. Both celebratory and critical modernisms shared this premise.

300

Miscegenation:

The mixing of racial groups, historically forbidden by colonial powers. Connected to Orientalist romantic fantasy: a covert libidinal desire for the Other simultaneously repressed through racial prohibitions.

300

May 68

Failed French student revolution, failed and got reformed. 
400

Modernism

Intellectual and Cultural movement: emphasizing reason and scientific progress. Believes that the objective truth exists, and works towards improvement.

400

Post-Modern Irony

Self awareness and playful references to cultural forms. Hairspray.

400

Living Dead, and who said it

Mbembe: Where populations are forced into living situations, that strip dignity and political value, hard to live in.

400

Nakba

Arabic for 'catastrophe',refers to the 1948 displacement of Palestinians. An example of contested memory and traumatic history whose political stakes are ongoing. Tied to questions of witness and the politics of remembrance.

400

colonial epistemic violence:

The destruction of colonized peoples' ways of knowing, belief systems, languages, and cosmologies through the imposition of European knowledge as universal. 'Denigrate, discount, dismiss, destroy the Other.'

500

Grand NArratives

Large scale theories that explain society and human development. Lyotard says this is part of post-modernalism, as they question grand narratives as they ignore alternate perspectives.

500

Simulacrum

Baudrillards: a copy of something that no longer has an original. Postmodernism: representation can be more important than the original.

500

Diaspora

Communities dispersed outside their homeland while maintaining cultural connections from afar.

500

Flexible Accumulation

David Harvey: What followed the collapse of Fordism. Involved outsourcing and temporary labor. Maximizing profits, minimizing costs and commitment to workers.

500

Time-Space Compression

David Harvey: technology and globalization accelerates the movements of goods and information. Defining feature of globalization.

M
e
n
u