Frank-talking: a reading of Biko's statement "On Death" with Foucault's concept of parrhesia
In: Social dynamics: SD ; a journal of the Centre for African Studies, University of Cape Town, Band 49, Heft 1, S. 150-171
ISSN: 1940-7874
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In: Social dynamics: SD ; a journal of the Centre for African Studies, University of Cape Town, Band 49, Heft 1, S. 150-171
ISSN: 1940-7874
In: Social dynamics: SD ; a journal of the Centre for African Studies, University of Cape Town, Band 46, Heft 2, S. 323-347
ISSN: 1940-7874
In: African studies, Band 78, Heft 4, S. 590-608
ISSN: 1469-2872
In: Comparative studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, Band 39, Heft 1, S. 24-36
ISSN: 1548-226X
World Affairs Online
In: Journal of Asian and African studies: JAAS, Band 43, Heft 4, S. 482-488
ISSN: 1745-2538
The current resurgence of Marxism is based on new sources of inspiration and creativity from movements that seek democratic, egalitarian and ecological alternatives to capitalism. The Marxism of many of these movements is neither dogmatic nor prescriptive, but rather, open, searching, utopian. It revolves around four primary factors: the importance of democracy for an emancipatory project; the ecological limits of capitalism; the crisis of global capitalism; and the learning of lessons from the failures of Marxist-inspired experiments. Marxisms in the Twenty-First Century challenges vanguardist Marxism featured in South Africa and beyond. Featuring leading thinkers from the Left, the book offers provocative ideas on interpreting our current world and serves as an excellent introduction to new ways of thinking about Marxism to students and scholars in the field. Many anti-capitalist traditions and themes - including democracy, globalisation, feminism, critique and ecology inform and shape the contributions in this volume.
In: Critical Thinkers
What does it mean to work with radical concepts in our time of rampant inequality, imperial-capitalist plunder, racial/sexual/class violence and ecocide? When concepts from the past seem inadequate, how do scholars and activists concerned with social change decide what concepts to work with or renew? The contributors to Ethnographies of Power address these questions head on.
Gillian Hart is a key thinker in radical political economy, geography, development studies, agrarian studies and Gramscian critique of postcolonial capitalism. In Ethnographies of Power each contributor engages her work and applies it to their own field of study.
These applied concepts include: 'gendered labour' practices among South African workers, reading 'racial capitalism' through agrarian debates, using 'relational comparison' in an ethnography of schooling across Durban, reworking 'multiple socio-spatial trajectories' in Guatemala's Maya Biosphere Reserve, critiquing the notion of South Africa's 'second economy', revisiting 'development' processes and 'Development' discourses in US military contracting, reconsidering Gramsci's 'conjunctures' geographically, finding divergent 'articulations' in Cape Town land occupations, and exploring 'nationalism' as central to revaluing recyclables at a Soweto landfill.
Ethnographies of Power offers an invaluable toolkit for activists and scholars engaged in sharpening their critical concepts for the social and environmental change necessary for our collective future.
In: New South African review, 3
World Affairs Online