%0 Journal Article %T Speaking from other demonic bases of partiality %A Sneha Krishnan %J Dialogues in Human Geography %@ 2043-8214 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/2043820619850269 %X As Simandan (2019) argues, partiality and contingency are key to a politically attuned human geography. My commentary takes the author up on his suggestion that commentators examine the political implications of his framework. Critically, I use Sylvia Wynter¡¯s analytic of ¡®demonic ground¡¯ to critique Simandan¡¯s ¡®demonic geography¡¯ that underlies the epistemic framework he presents in this article. In doing so, this commentary focuses on the author¡¯s conceptualization of intersectionality and diversity, arguing instead for a more fundamental critique of the geopolitical location of post-humanist thought itself %K decolonial theory %K diversity %K intersectionality %K race %K Sylvia Wynter %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2043820619850269