Salesian Polytechnic University. Anthropology. Ecuador.
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 27(03), 1929-1932
Article DOI: 10.30574/wjarr.2025.27.3.3362
Received on 20 August 2025; revised on 26 September 2025; accepted on 30 September 2025
This essay critically examines the evolution of "decolonial" thought, showing how it moved from being a tool of denunciation to becoming a doctrinal current. The central hypothesis argues that, when repeated as an uncritical creed, "decolonialism" loses its emancipatory power and risks essentializing the Global South while reducing the West to a negative caricature. Through a comparative analysis of postcolonial critiques in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, tensions are identified between the denunciation of Eurocentrism and the danger of falling into Manichean or anti-Western visions. It is proposed that anthropology, far from sacrificing its epistemic rigor in the name of ideological activism, should sustain a critical dialogue with modernity, recovering both the emancipatory contributions of decolonial thought and the universal values of the Enlightenment tradition, including human rights.
Decolonialism; Critical Epistemology; Anthropology; Modernity
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Carlos Efraín Montúfar Salcedo. The unnoticed creed of “Decolonialism”. World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 27(03), 1929-1932. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2025.27.3.3362.
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