Abstract
This essay argues that a new technique of ordering and producing space emerged in
the sixteenth century, whereby the Américas were taken as a heterotopic laboratory for
the space of the grid. As the ordered grid of space lightened the physical fortification of
heavy walls traditionally found in medieval Europe, it implanted new methods of
ordering the behavior of the human body and soul. In this way, the grid gave rise to
disciplinary techniques of controlling and producing human subjectivity. The global
problematic of space as it emerges after 1492 is a central thematic of decolonial
philosophy and critiques of coloniality. Many accounts of decolonial philosophy
emphasize the ontological nihilation of the periphery, the European production of the
other as non-being in an empty space beyond the line. This article supplements this
view by arguing that we need an account of the production and ordering of this space
that goes beyond simple negation and emptiness. The coloniality of power, thus, has a
disciplinary dimension that involves the ordering and production of subjects and spaces
in the Américas, while Foucauldian disciplinary power is entangled with the coloniality of
power.