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  1.  29
    The Vulnerability of the Ordinary.Sandra Laugier & Wayne Wapeemukwa - 2018 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 39 (2):367-401.
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  2.  29
    Teaching and Learning Indigenous Philosophy in Viral Times.Wayne Wapeemukwa, Eduardo Mendieta & Jules Wong - forthcoming - Teaching Philosophy.
    The authors of this essay challenge the notion that “philosophy” is irredeemably Eurocentric by providing a series of personal, professional, and pedagogical reflections on their experience in a new graduate seminar on “Indigenous philosophy.” The authors—a graduate student, professor, and Indigenous course-facilitator—share in the fashion of “Indigenous storywork,” as outlined by Stó:lō pedagogue Jo-Ann Archibald. We begin with the instructor and how he was personally challenged to re-evaluate his roots and philosophical praxis in spite of his experience teaching over several (...)
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    Primitive Speculation: Marx on Precapitalism, Social Relations to Land, and Indigenous Dispossession.Wayne Wapeemukwa - 2024 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 38 (3):359-370.
    ABSTRACT Marx studied how capitalism changes relations to land before and after Capital—but wielded different methodologies and reached different conclusions. In Grundrisse, Marx investigates precapitalism from a speculative standpoint. In Capital, Marx provides a selective and historical description of dispossession but delimits his analysis to Western Europe. Post-Capital, Marx wields Henry Lewis Morgan’s anthropology and Justus von Liebig’s ecology as scientific bases upon which to critique capitalist property relations. Specifically, Marx believed that the capitalist mode of production installed a historically (...)
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