Abstract

This short essay reframes the debate on the subject stated in the title from the perspective of an intercultural philosophy and liberationist, seeking to clarify the concepts involved and distinguish between postures more or less naive or celebratory of the interculturality/decolonization, on one hand, and critical and emancipatory postures on the other hand. We are at an historic point in which the discourse of interculturality and decolonization undergoes a process of wear and cooptation by the hegemonic monocultural and globalizing model in the sense of a Western cultural imperialism and of a postmodernity in consumerism key.

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