HomeNewsOpinionIt's dumb to make 'decolonisation' a dirty word

It's dumb to make 'decolonisation' a dirty word

It’s easy to see why US elites are tempted to stigmatise and banish the words that offend their preferred image of a still-dominant, liberal-democratic West. Those who remain indifferent to the irresistible momentum of decolonisation must each day find the world a disconcertingly more unfamiliar place

December 19, 2023 / 10:33 IST
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Those who remain indifferent to the irresistible momentum of decolonisation must each day find the world a disconcertingly more unfamiliar place.

Beginning in the 1940s, countries in Asia and Africa began to liberate themselves from direct and indirect Western rule. The process was broadly termed “decolonisation” by witnesses and historians alike. In an extraordinary twist, this simple word used to describe a major fact of modern history — one that is vital to a majority of the world’s population — is now being demonised by US elites, just when the West can least afford such willful ignorance.

In humanities departments across the US, scholars have long argued that disparities of power exist not only between the Global North and South; they have stressed the need for decolonisation in cultural and intellectual realms as well. And they have elaborated theories connecting their endeavour to domestic racial justice movements, such as the civil rights movement and Black Lives Matter.

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Many students exposed to these theories use them, fervently and often indiscriminately, to condemn Israel as a colonialist state. This in turn is provoking even many of their liberal and centrist elders to join an already fierce Republican campaign against “wokeness” in academia.

A much-circulated article in the Atlantic claims decolonisation theory is a “toxic, inhumane ideology,” a “nonsensical mix of Marxist theory, Soviet propaganda and traditional anti-Semitism from the Middle Ages.” X Corp owner Elon Musk has gone further, declaring a ban on the word “decolonisation” itself, which according to him is one of the “euphemisms” today that “necessarily imply genocide.”