Dislocating Globality engages in a vigorous exploration of the complexities of globalization, particularly of some of its neglected aspects. Through a collection of very interesting papers which focus on particularly two essential aspects of the new forms of globality – the logics of political change and of cultural dislocation – it offers a fascinating picture of innovation and creativity on the dark side of the globalization process. Against the pleasant fable of globalization as the universal spread of a benevolent and uniform modernity, this collection offers a picture of a strange, creative, innovative world in the making where things, people and institutions are forced out of their conventional places and functions. The collection offers a fascinating critical view of global modernity in its migratory flows, cultural creativity and displacement, and the surprise of political improvisation. Sudipta Kaviraj, Columbia University This collection of essays opens up new research avenues and is going to become a standard reference for scholars of globalization. Traversing diverse global landscapes and working the boundaries between disciplines it sheds light on the dislocating effects produced by the experience of globality on economies, cultures, and societies. And at the same time it dislocates the very notion of globality, demonstrating how multiple practices of resistance haunt the “monocultural” tendencies of globalization from the inside. A fascinating reading and a welcome new start in globalization studies!Sandro Mezzadra, University of BolognaFrom the postcolonial confusions of the Charlie cartoons to the zero-popping arithmetics of a lumpen counter-hegemony, the range and verve of these essays will never allow the mono of 'their' globalization time to recover. A narrowed and homogenised theoretical distance is scattered into constituent variabilities and divergent localities, as each chapter of this book offers a differing and defiant global vernacular burn.John Hutnyk, RMIT University, MelbourneThis is one of the most challenging and provocative anthologies on globalization to come out in recent times. The editor has managed to bring together a bunch of audacious, youthful and politically committed writers from different parts of the globe whose corners are diverse and wide-ranging. From gentrification in Istanbul and New Delhi to French response to Charlie Hebdo massacre, from disability in Ecuador to social enterprise in indigenous Australia, from analysis of iconic global artists to debating insurgency in the Arab world, from subaltern commodification in third-world industrial slums to the politics of diasporic sexuality – the sheer range of the contributions is mind-boggling. There are also some insightful and cutting-edge theoretical essays. This is activist scholarship at its best. These are the new dissenting voices in the study of globalization. Bhaskar Mukhopadhyay, the author of The Rumor of GlobalizationDislocating Globility is an attempt to bring 'small voices' from the often sidelined parts of the world to counter and encounter the metropolises. Multidisciplinary, inter-media, and translocational, the project is an alternative articulation to the familiar discourse on globalization. Kuan-Hsing Chen, National Chiao Tung University