In examining the intellectual history in contemporary South
Africa, Eze engages with the emergence of ubuntu as one discourse
that has become a mirror and aftermath of South Africa’s overall
historical narrative. This book interrogates a triple
socio-political representation of ubuntu as a displacement
narrative for South Africa’s colonial consciousness; as offering a
new national imaginary through its inclusive consciousness, in
which different, competing, and often antagonistic memories and
histories are accommodated; and as offering a historicity in which
the past is transformed as a symbol of hope for the present and the
future. This book offers a model for African intellectual history
indignant to polemics but constitutive of creative historicism and
healthy humanism.
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