Junot Díaz on ‘De-colonial Love’, Revolution and More [Video]

Dec 04, 2012

It’s hard to judge who’s been clamoring for this more: folks who weren’t at our conference and missed it, or folks who were and who want to see it again. Here’s an excerpt from author the keynote address of Junot Díaz, recipient of the Pulitzer Prize and the MacArthur Foundation ‘Genius’ Grant, at our [Facing Race 2012 conference](https://colorlines.com/facing-race-2012/) in Baltimore last month. This excerpt is the first 25 minutes of his talk, and there’s plenty to chew on. Here, for instance, is Díaz explaining his work’s recurring theme of "decolonial love": "The funny thing about our privilege is that we all have a blind spot around our privilege, shaped exactly like us. Most of us will identify privileges that we know we could live without. So when it comes time to talk about our privileges, we’ll throw shit down like it’s an ace. And that shit is a three! I understand that. You grow up and you live a life where you feel like you haven’t had shit, the last thing you want to give up is the one thing, the couple of things that you’ve really held on to. "I’m telling you guys, we’re never going to fucking get anywhere–if you want to hear my apocalyptic proclamation which I would never repeat, but which I know you motherfuckers are going to tweet about–we are never going to get anywhere as long as our economies of attraction continue to resemble, more or less, the economy of attraction of white supremacy."