María Lugones (1944-2020) was an Argentine-American philosopher. She was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and moved to the United States as a young woman, where she completed her doctorate in philosophy and spent her career teaching at Binghamton University in New York. She was a feminist philosopher, a Latina scholar, and a community activist who worked extensively with migrant and indigenous communities in the American Southwest. She is best known for two connected contributions to philosophy. The first is her concept of world-travelling: the practice of genuinely entering another person's world to see reality as they see it, which she proposed as the foundation of a loving and just way of relating across difference. The second is her concept of the coloniality of gender: the argument that the gender system as it now exists across most of the world was imposed through colonialism, and that many indigenous and non-Western communities had very different and often more complex and flexible understandings of gender before colonial contact. She died in 2020, widely recognised as one of the most important feminist philosophers of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.
Lugones matters because she expanded feminist philosophy in two important directions. First, she showed that much feminist philosophy had been written from the perspective of white, Western, educated women and had missed or excluded the experiences of women of colour, indigenous women, and women from the Global South. She insisted that genuine feminist philosophy had to start from the margins, from the experiences of those who faced multiple overlapping forms of oppression rather than only gender discrimination. Second, she showed that the gender categories we often treat as natural and universal, the binary division of all people into male or female with distinct roles and characteristics, were not universal human facts but were imposed through colonialism. Many indigenous communities had more than two gender categories, fluid understandings of gender, and social roles that did not map onto the European binary. Understanding this history matters both for feminist thought and for the broader question of what social arrangements are genuinely natural and what are the products of specific historical processes.
The essay Playfulness, World-Travelling, and Loving Perception (1987), freely available in various philosophy anthologies and online, is Lugones's most accessible and most widely read piece and is the best introduction to her concept of world-travelling. For a short overview of her work: the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has a freely available article on María Lugones. Her book Pilgrimages/Peregrinajes (2003, Rowman and Littlefield) collects her most important essays.
Coloniality and Gender (2007), published in the journal Tabula Rasa and freely available online, is the foundational text for her analysis of the colonial gender system.
Kimberlé Crenshaw's essay Demarginalising the Intersection of Race and Sex (1989), freely available online, develops parallel arguments in the legal context and provides useful comparison.
Aníbal Quijano's work on coloniality of power, on which Lugones builds, is available in the journal Nepantla.
Lugones argues that all gender differences are simply imposed by colonialism and do not exist naturally.
Lugones argues that the specific gender binary as it operates in modern colonial and postcolonial societies was imposed through colonialism rather than being a universal natural fact. She does not argue that there are no natural differences between people or that gender is entirely artificial. Her point is that the specific forms, meanings, and social roles associated with gender in different contexts are shaped by historical and cultural processes, including colonialism, and are not simply expressions of biological nature. Different communities have understood and organised gender in different ways.
World-travelling means agreeing with everyone or having no standards of your own.
Lugones distinguishes world-travelling from relativism. Entering another person's world to see it as they see it does not mean abandoning your own values or agreeing with everything you find there. It means genuinely trying to understand before judging, seeing with their eyes before evaluating with your own. After genuine world-travelling, you may still disagree with practices or values you encounter. But the disagreement will be informed by genuine understanding rather than by the arrogant projection of your own categories onto an experience you have not genuinely entered.
Lugones's work is only relevant to Latina women and their specific experiences.
While Lugones drew on her own experience as an Argentine Latina woman in the United States, her concepts of world-travelling, arrogant and loving perception, and the coloniality of gender address universal philosophical questions about how we understand each other across difference, and historical questions about how colonial power shaped gender systems worldwide. Her framework has been applied by scholars working on African gender systems, Asian feminist thought, indigenous gender traditions in many contexts, and the experiences of multiple overlapping oppressions in very different settings.
Lugones argued that Western feminism is simply wrong and should be abandoned.
Lugones was a feminist throughout her life and engaged seriously with Western feminist philosophy. Her critique was not that Western feminism was worthless but that it was incomplete: it had developed concepts and frameworks that were genuinely useful but that reflected specific experiences and missed others. She wanted to expand feminist philosophy to start from the experiences of the most marginalised rather than only from the experiences of relatively privileged women. This is a project of enrichment and completion rather than rejection.
The collection Feminist Genealogies, Colonial Legacies, Democratic Futures, edited by M. Jacqui Alexander and Chandra Mohanty (1997, Routledge), provides the intellectual context.
The journal Hypatia and the journal Feminist Philosophy Quarterly publish the best current academic work developing and debating her ideas.
Chandra Mohanty's Feminism Without Borders (2003, Duke University Press) is the most comprehensive account of the field Lugones helped create.
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