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Patricia Cipollitti Rodríguez

CUNY Graduate Center
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 More details
  • CUNY Graduate Center
    Department of Philosophy
    Doctoral student
Areas of Specialization
Social and Political Philosophy
Critical Theory
Latin American Philosophy
Feminist Philosophy
  • All publications (3)
  •  10
    An Yountae, Coloniality of the Secular: Race, Religion, and Poetics of World-Making (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2024) (review)
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 46 (2): 589-592. 2025.
  •  29
    Totality and Exteriority: Categories for a Decolonial Critical Theory
    Global Dialogue 13 (3): 22-23. 2023.
    Critical TheoryColonialism and PostcolonialismLatin American Philosophy
  •  569
    Asymmetric Power, Asymmetric Knowledge, and Solidarity: Lessons from Hermeneutic and Creolizing Epistemologies
    Critical Times 7 (3). 2024.
    Emancipatory social movement solidarities are prefigurative associations. While pursuing broad-based social transformations, solidaristic agents attempt to model—in an incomplete and provisional way—the social relations they wish to bring into existence. Existing structures of domination, deep-set and overlapping as they are, pose an abiding challenge to the prefiguration of just relations, however. This article considers the challenge of prefiguration by developing a diachronic, goal-oriented, …Read more
    Emancipatory social movement solidarities are prefigurative associations. While pursuing broad-based social transformations, solidaristic agents attempt to model—in an incomplete and provisional way—the social relations they wish to bring into existence. Existing structures of domination, deep-set and overlapping as they are, pose an abiding challenge to the prefiguration of just relations, however. This article considers the challenge of prefiguration by developing a diachronic, goal-oriented, and epistemic account of solidarity. The author argues that solidarity is a collaborative process whereby agents prefigure relationships of nondomination while working together to reach shared understandings about the political task at hand. The author examines two epistemologies that have not been traditionally connected to philosophical discussions of solidarity, philosophical hermeneutics and creolization, to elaborate the account. While both frameworks enable an understanding of solidarity as a properly transformative relation, creolization illuminates the possibilities and difficulties of collaborating under conditions of domination.
    Afro-Caribbean PhilosophySocial EpistemologyHermeneuticsSocial and Political Philosophy
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