TY - JOUR
T1 - Decoloniality and language scholarship - a critical intervention
AU - Rambukwella, Harshana
AU - Zavala, Virginia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - In this article, we argue that the way decoloniality is invoked in sociolinguistics runs the risk of becoming a buzzword that is sometimes deployed with inadequate attention to how its conceptual and political premises need to be critically contextualized. We propose three interconnected challenges that critical applied/sociolinguists would need to address more seriously in order to avoid the depoliticization of the discussions around language and (de)coloniality: (1) the insistence on an incommensurable non-western alterity outside modernity; (2) the production of new binaries despite trying to undermine them; and (3) the decontextualization of the studied phenomena from on-the-ground situations in highly complex circumstances. We claim, on the one hand, that 'Northern' appropriation of decoloniality can offer self-deluding comfort that one is engaging in a politics of emancipation, yet all that is taking place is a form of withdrawal from the messiness of contemporary politics. On the other hand, this depoliticized decoloniality is also instrumentalized in the Global South to romanticize indigeneity/minorities and exploit them for insidious political purposes, generating recursive internal differentiations and inequality.
AB - In this article, we argue that the way decoloniality is invoked in sociolinguistics runs the risk of becoming a buzzword that is sometimes deployed with inadequate attention to how its conceptual and political premises need to be critically contextualized. We propose three interconnected challenges that critical applied/sociolinguists would need to address more seriously in order to avoid the depoliticization of the discussions around language and (de)coloniality: (1) the insistence on an incommensurable non-western alterity outside modernity; (2) the production of new binaries despite trying to undermine them; and (3) the decontextualization of the studied phenomena from on-the-ground situations in highly complex circumstances. We claim, on the one hand, that 'Northern' appropriation of decoloniality can offer self-deluding comfort that one is engaging in a politics of emancipation, yet all that is taking place is a form of withdrawal from the messiness of contemporary politics. On the other hand, this depoliticized decoloniality is also instrumentalized in the Global South to romanticize indigeneity/minorities and exploit them for insidious political purposes, generating recursive internal differentiations and inequality.
KW - critique
KW - decoloniality
KW - indigeneity
KW - language scholarship
KW - Perú
KW - Sri Lanka
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105003069088&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1515/ijsl-2024-0046
DO - 10.1515/ijsl-2024-0046
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105003069088
SN - 0165-2516
JO - International Journal of the Sociology of Language
JF - International Journal of the Sociology of Language
ER -