Evaluating Decolonial Authors from a Marxist-Leninist Perspective
Evaluating Decolonial Authors from a Marxist-Leninist Perspective
[THIS POST WAS ORIGINALLY POSTED ON REDDIT IN R/TankieTheDeprogram ON THE 10TH OF JANUARY 2026]
Hey guys,
I wanted to open up a Marxist (and actually leftist) discussion on the topics of decoloniality, decolonial authors, and decolonial academia more generally. Specifically, I am interested in whether decolonial theory and decolonial academics are politically useful for Marxists, or whether they function as an ideological dead end.
I avoided posting this in the critical theory sub because that space is very libbed up.
As you may already be aware of not all forms of decoloniality are Marxist.
Anyways I hope the questions I provided can open up a discussion on it, you can also add separate discussion points below. This Post should help Marxist and non-Marxist foster a better understanding of an actual leftist perspective of decoloniality.
Discussion questions:
Are decolonial academics genuinely contributing to anti-imperialist struggle, or are they using “decoloniality” as an academic smokescreen/vanity?
Do academics monopolize discourse while detaching colonialism from capitalism?
In some cases, does decolonial academia end up silencing the proletariat, and silence Marxist voices?
What are your thoughts on decoloniality?
What would an actual Marxist approach to decoloniality look like (both academic and in the IRL liberation movements)?
I would also love to hear people’s thoughts on the following decolonial authors (and feel free to add others):
Frantz Fanon
Walter Rodney
Olúfẹ́mi Táíwò
Walter Mignolo (I am aware he is not a Marxist. This might be a good case study for how decoloniality can become politically harmful)
I made an earlier post touching on this topic and postcolonialism, which you can find on both Reddit and Lemmygrad:
Lemmygrad: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/9854938