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A*DESK has been offering since 2002 contents about criticism and contemporary art. A*DESK has become consolidated thanks to all those who have believed in the project, all those who have followed us, debating, participating and collaborating. Many people have collaborated with A*DESK, and continue to do so. Their efforts, knowledge and belief in the project are what make it grow internationally. At A*DESK we have also generated work for over one hundred professionals in culture, from small collaborations with reviews and classes, to more prolonged and intense collaborations.

At A*DESK we believe in the need for free and universal access to culture and knowledge. We want to carry on being independent, remaining open to more ideas and opinions. If you believe in A*DESK, we need your backing to be able to continue. You can now participate in the project by supporting it. You can choose how much you want to contribute to the project.

You can decide how much you want to bring to the project.

Yuderkys Espinosa Miñoso – Autor/a en A*Desk

Yuderkys Espinosa Miñoso is an Afro-Caribbean writer, researcher and teacher, a precursor of decolonial feminism and a critic of the “coloniality of feminist reason”. She is the director of the Caribbean Institute for Decolonial Thought and Research and a founding member of the Latin American Group for Feminist Studies, Training and Action (GLEFAS). She has received several awards, including CLACSO’s Berta Cáceres Research Award and the Käte Hamburger scholarship at the University of Heidelberg. Curator of the project “Antifuturismo cimarrón” with 16 racialised artists from Abya Yala. Author of essays and academic texts, and editor of key compilations of decolonial feminism such as “Tejiendo de Otro modo:Feminismo, epistemología y apuestas descoloniales”.

She has published numerous essays and books and has been translated into English, French, Italian, German and Portuguese. Her recent publications include “Decolonial Feminism in Latin America: An Essential Anthology,” “Decolonial Feminism in Abya Yala: Caribbean, Meso, and South American Contributions and Challenges,” or “De porqué es necesario un feminismo descolonial” and her collection of poems “Laquevuelve”.

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"A desk is a dangerous place from which to watch the world" (John Le Carré)