Theory from the Trenches: Decolonization and the Storm of Subaltern Marxism
Eggers Hall, 341
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The Moynihan Institute’s South Asia Center presents Shozab Raza from the University of Toronto and Princeton University.
He conceptualizes these subaltern engagements with theory as trench theory, a form of subterranean theorizing shaped by the demands of political struggle. Using the metaphor of the trench, he highlights how these marginalized actors developed intellectual frameworks from within the very trenches of resistance. Ultimately, his work demonstrates how subaltern actors drew upon ideas from diverse intellectual traditions, crossing borders and oceans, to create trench concepts—theoretical tools aimed at achieving not just worldly, but even other-worldly, liberation.
This talk is cosponsored by the Anthropology Department and the School of Education.
Shozab Raza is an assistant professor of social justice education and anthropology at the University of Toronto, and a 2024-25 Fung Global Fellow at Princeton University. As a historical anthropologist, his research and teaching focuses on revolutionary political imaginaries and political economy as these unfold across Asia, the Indian Ocean and beyond. He is finalizing his book manuscript, titled “Theory from the Trenches: Decolonization and the Storm of Subaltern Marxism.” Shozab’s research has been published in several journals, including Cultural Anthropology and Comparative Studies in Society and History, while his public writing has appeared in venues like The Guardian and Boston Review. He is also a founding editor of Jamhoor.
Category
Social Science and Public Policy
Type
Talks
Region
Campus
Open to
Public
Organizers
MAX-Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs, MAX-South Asia Center
Accessibility
Contact Matt Baxter to request accommodations