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Multi-layered inequalities and a sense of insecurity has long been
the hallmark of South African life. Recently, however, the
uncertainties of Covid-19 have led to greater shared experiences of
vulnerability among South Africans. This volume of State of the
Nation offers perspectives that may help us navigate our way
through the ‘new normal’ in which we find ourselves. Foremost
among the unavoidable political and socioeconomic interventions
that will be required are interventions based on an ethics of care.
Care as an essential attribute must be inserted into all of the
diverse contexts that structure needs, desires and relations of
power. An ethics of care requires us to reconsider relations of
domination, oppression, injustice, inequality, or paternalism
within the state. In a democratic post-apartheid state that
confirms human connectedness, bodies matter and this knowledge must
be driven by active citizenship. We are all caught up in webs of
power that require of us, as individuals and as communities, the
will and understanding to combat and counter poverty and inequality
and thus to improve the state of the nation. The effects of poverty
and inequality are as insidious as Covid-19 and render the most
vulnerable even more powerless in the face of this and similar
ravages. Now, more than ever, we need to prioritise an ethics of
care.
Who or what is a public intellectual and how are they created? What
is the role of the public intellectual in social, cultural,
political and academic contexts? What are the kinds of questions
they raise? What compels intellectuals to put forward their ideas?
The Fabric of Dissent: Public Intellectuals in South Africa is a
pioneering volume, representing a rich tapestry of South Africans
who were able to rise beyond narrow formulations of identity into a
larger sense of what it means to be human. Each brief portrait
provides readers with an opportunity to consider the context,
influences and unique tensions that shaped the people assembled
here. In its entirety, the book showcases an astonishing array of
achievements and bears testimony to the deep imprint of these
public intellectuals. As South Africans continue to grapple with
their past, present and future, it is clear that the insights of
these remarkable people into reimagining an inclusive society
continue to be relevant today.
Those featured in The Texture of Dissent were shaped and
preoccupied by the issues facing South Africans after the
Nationalist Party election victory in 1948 and most of the
academics included in this volume only became prominent from the
late 1990s. This volume draws on the ways in which public
intellectuals are involved in the ‘political work of social
change’ through defiant thought and action. Those assembled in
this volume are, in the view of the writers, people who ultimately
leave deep imprints on what it means to be human in a very complex
and divided society.
Reflections on the 2019 South African General Elections is a
critical reflection on the key lessons of Elections 2019 in South
Africa, focusing on the future of the country's electoral
democracy. The volume engages questions on land, election
campaigns, voter turnout, voter apathy, and how opposition parties
will be forced to co-exist in the context of declining electoral
dominance the ANC once comfortably held. An important reflection on
the lessons of the 2019 South African General Elections, the
contributors ask: Quo Vadis South Africa? The 2019 General
Elections marked a watershed in South Africa's political landscape.
The ANC under the banner of a narrative of regeneration and getting
back on the moral path dipped below the 60 % mark for the first
time in South Africa's democratic history. This decline in
electoral support for the party may be interpreted as a
degeneration of the ANC through the loss of its moral stature, the
erosion of its integrity and disillusionment with its performance
as a governing party. Opposition political parties could not
capitalise on this seeming disillusionment with the ruling ANC.
Caught in their own factional battles and in the midst of
corruption scandals, opposition parties were unable to successfully
increase their share of the vote, and capture the undecided and
disillusioned voter. Considering the future of South Africa's
electoral democracy at 25 years of democracy, Reflections on the
2019 South African General Elections will be of great interest to
scholars of African Studies, South Africa, Governance and
Elections. The chapters in this book were originally published as a
special issue of Politikon: South African Journal of Political
Studies.
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