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Neither Settler nor Native - The Making and Unmaking of Permanent Minorities (Paperback)
Loot Price: R433
Discovery Miles 4 330
You Save: R92
(18%)
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Neither Settler nor Native - The Making and Unmaking of Permanent Minorities (Paperback)
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List price R525
Loot Price R433
Discovery Miles 4 330
You Save R92 (18%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Prospect Top 50 Thinker of 2021 British Academy Book Prize Finalist
PROSE Award Finalist "Provocative, elegantly written." -Fara
Dabhoiwala, New York Review of Books "Demonstrates how a broad
rethinking of political issues becomes possible when Western ideals
and practices are examined from the vantage point of Asia and
Africa." -Pankaj Mishra, New York Review of Books In case after
case around the globe-from Israel to Sudan-the colonial state and
the nation-state have been constructed through the politicization
of a religious or ethnic majority at the expense of an equally
manufactured minority. The model emerged in America, where genocide
and internment on reservations created a permanent native minority.
In Europe, this template would be used both by the Nazis and the
Allies. Neither Settler nor Native offers a vision for arresting
this process. Mahmood Mamdani points to inherent limitations in the
legal solution attempted at Nuremberg. Political violence demands
political solutions: not criminal justice but a rethinking of the
political community to include victims and perpetrators, bystanders
and beneficiaries. Making the radical argument that the
nation-state was born of colonialism, he calls on us to delink the
nation from the state so as to ensure equal political rights for
all who live within its boundaries. "A deeply learned account of
the origins of our modern world...Mamdani rejects the current focus
on human rights as the means to bring justice to the victims of
this colonial and postcolonial bloodshed. Instead, he calls for a
new kind of political imagination...Joining the ranks of Hannah
Arendt's Imperialism, Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth, and
Edward Said's Orientalism, this book is destined to become a
classic text of postcolonial studies and political theory."
-Moustafa Bayoumi, author of How Does It Feel to Be a Problem? "A
masterwork of historical comparison and razor-sharp political
analysis, with grave lessons about the pitfalls of forgetting,
moralizing, or criminalizing this violence. Mamdani also offers a
hopeful rejoinder in a revived politics of decolonization." -Karuna
Mantena, Columbia University "A powerfully original argument, one
that supplements political analysis with a map for our political
future." -Faisal Devji, University of Oxford
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