In Ethics: Subjectivity and Truth (1998), Michel Foucault states that before a person can reach a spiritual transformation, they should seek the very truth that will leave one transformed, a phenomenon he describes as “techniques of the...
moreIn Ethics: Subjectivity and Truth (1998), Michel Foucault states that before a person can reach a spiritual transformation, they should seek the very truth that will leave one transformed, a phenomenon he describes as “techniques of the self.” Additional theorists and philosophers, such as Emma Perez, Judith Butler, Ramon Grosfoguel, Nelson Maldonado-Torres and Jose David Saldivar, explore the relationship of the self to “the other” in their theoretical texts. Through a careful analysis of decolonial and philosophical ideas about identity, I critically analyze the journey and eventual transformation that fictional character Micaela (also known as Lorenzo) undertakes in Emma Perez’s novel Forgetting the Alamo, or, Blood Memory . Micaela struggles with the resilience of the “coloniality of power” in her everyday life as it leaves her angry, hateful and “uncivilized.” I address questions about barriers that make personal transformations difficult. Micaela’s retelling demonstrates that ...