Decolonize That! Bundle
about the bookabout
This complete set of the Decolonize That! series cuts through buzzwords and lazy narratives to offer lively, concise introductions to some of today’s most contested cultural terrains. Smart, provocative, and often funny, each book invites you to rethink the assumptions baked into everyday life. The collection includes:
Decolonize Hipsters: a crisp dismantling of trendiness, authenticity, and cultural appropriation.
Decolonize Museums: an essential look at how institutions collect, display, and narrate other people’s cultures.
Decolonize Self-Care: an examination of how wellness culture detaches care from community, politics, and justice.
Decolonize Multiculturalism: a sharp critique of feel-good diversity that ignores systems of power.
Decolonize Drag: a nuanced investigation of performance, identity, protest, and the complicated history of drag itself. Read individually, each book offers a clear, compelling entry point for rethinking a major cultural theme. Read across the series, they become a toolkit for understanding how colonial frameworks persist and how we can imagine something better.
in the media
Decolonize That! Bundle
about the bookabout
This complete set of the Decolonize That! series cuts through buzzwords and lazy narratives to offer lively, concise introductions to some of today’s most contested cultural terrains. Smart, provocative, and often funny, each book invites you to rethink the assumptions baked into everyday life. The collection includes:
Decolonize Hipsters: a crisp dismantling of trendiness, authenticity, and cultural appropriation.
Decolonize Museums: an essential look at how institutions collect, display, and narrate other people’s cultures.
Decolonize Self-Care: an examination of how wellness culture detaches care from community, politics, and justice.
Decolonize Multiculturalism: a sharp critique of feel-good diversity that ignores systems of power.
Decolonize Drag: a nuanced investigation of performance, identity, protest, and the complicated history of drag itself. Read individually, each book offers a clear, compelling entry point for rethinking a major cultural theme. Read across the series, they become a toolkit for understanding how colonial frameworks persist and how we can imagine something better.

