In Heterosexualism and the Colonial/Modern System (2007), I proposed to read the relation between the colonizer and the colonized in terms of gender, race, and sexuality. By this, I did not mean to add a gendered reading and a racial reading to the already understood colonial relations. Rather I proposed a rereading of modern capitalist colonial modernity itself. This is because the colonial imposition of gender cuts across questions of ecology, economics, government, relations with the spirit world, and knowledge, as well as across practices that either habituate us to take care of the world or to destroy it. I propose this framework not as an abstraction from lived experience, but as a lens that enables us to see what is hidden from our understandings of both race and gender and the relation of each to normative heterosexuality.
Gender; Race; Sexuality; Coloniality; Normative Heterosexualism; Decolonial Feminism