Michael Onyebuchi Eze; Lawrence Hamilton; Laurence Piper; Gideon Riet; Paula Ensor; Daryl Glaser; Christine Hobden; Kenis Wits University Press (2024) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Michael Onyebuchi Eze; Lawrence Hamilton; Laurence Piper; Gideon Riet; Paula Ensor; Daryl Glaser; Christine Hobden; Kenis Wits University Press (2024) Kovakantinen kirja
Wits University Press Sivumäärä: 296 sivua Asu: Pehmeäkantinen kirja Julkaisuvuosi: 2024, 01.07.2024 (lisätietoa) Kieli: Englanti
Rick Turner was a South African academic and activist who rebelled against apartheid at the height of its power and was assassinated in 1978 when he was 32 years old, but his life and work are testimony to the power of philosophical thinking for humans everywhere. Turner chose to live freely in an unfree time and argued for a non-racial, socialist future in a context where this seemed unimaginable.
This book considers Rick Turner’s challenge that political theorising requires thinking in a utopian way. Turner’s seminal book The Eye of the Needle: Towards a Participatory Democracy in South Africa laid out some of his most potent ideas on a radically different political and economic system. His demand was that we work to escape the limiting ideas of the present, carefully design a just future based on shared human values, and act to make it a reality, both politically and in our daily lives.
The contributors to this volume engage critically with Turner’s work on race relations, his relationship with Steve Biko, his views on religion, education and gender oppression, his model of participatory democracy, and his critique of enduring forms of poverty and economic inequality. They show how, in his life and work, Turner modelled how we can dare to be free and how hope can return, as the future always remains open to human construction. This book makes an important contribution to contemporary thinking and activism where the need for South Africans to define their understanding of the greater common good is of crucial importance.