
New Books in Critical Theory Piergiorgio Di Giminiani et al. eds., "The Futures of Reparations in Latin America: Imagination, Translation, and Belonging" (Rutgers UP, 2026)
Mar 20, 2026
Karine Vanthuyne, medical and political anthropologist focused on memory and indigenous mobilization. Helene Risør, researcher on violence, democracy, and reparations. Piergiorgio Di Giminiani, anthropologist specializing in land claims and indigeneity. They discuss reparations across Latin America. Short takes on imagination, translation of harm into policy, reshaped belonging, public memorials, multispecies and environmental repair.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Reparations Are A Process Not A Single Payment
- Reparations function as a processual, future-oriented practice rather than a one-time payout.
- Piergiorgio Di Giminiani shows state payouts like lump-sum money are moments inside long, contested, intergenerational repair trajectories.
Reparation As A Mode Of Worldmaking
- Reparation can be reframed as a way of living in a damaged world and worldmaking.
- Helene Risør emphasizes repair practices span generations and social domains, shaping everyday coexistence rather than being solely eventful interventions.
Reparations Are Imaginative Practices
- Reparations mobilize imagination to reconfigure how societies remember the past and envision the future.
- Piergiorgio Di Giminiani notes arts, circulation of knowledge and image production make memory and future aspirations contested political work.

