New Books in Critical Theory

Decolonizing the Novum

Apr 13, 2026
A deep dive into how speculative fiction reworks sixteenth century archives to rethink conquest and novelty. Conversations explore alternative histories, alien-invasion frames, and Mesoamerican voyages to Spain as imaginative tools. The discussion highlights archive-based storytelling, critical fabulation, and how weird narratives open up past contingencies to imagine otherwise.
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INSIGHT

Novum Is Rooted In The Invention Of The New World

  • The novum ties science fiction's idea of novelty to the 1492 invention of the New World.
  • Zac Zimmer argues that colonial conquest structurally anchors how modernity imagines newness, so decolonizing the novum starts with that historical moment.
INSIGHT

Speculation Rewrites Conquest Archives To Reveal Contingency

  • Latin American speculative works rewrite conquest archives to imagine alternative trajectories of contact and colonization.
  • Zimmer highlights novels and artworks that invert encounters (aliens, time travel, Mesoamericans to Spain) to expose contingency in history.
INSIGHT

Colonization Operates As Metaphor Across Sciences

  • Colonization functions both as political reality and as a metaphor used across disciplines.
  • Zimmer notes scientific ecology uses 'colonizer species' for lava-repopulating life, showing how colonization-language permeates nonhuman sciences.
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