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Blackness as a question of freedom: racial blackness in South African emancipatory thought

This dissertation, using the theoretical framework of Afropessimism, discusses how Blackness is an ethico-political structure, in which the slave's natal alienation and social death establishes the resilient forms of Black (non)being. This project centrally argues against locating a theory of the pr...

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Main Author: Nkopo, Athinangamso
Other Authors: Haarhoff, Mandisa
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: African Studies 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Nkopo, Athinangamso
author2 Haarhoff, Mandisa
author_browse Haarhoff, Mandisa
Nkopo, Athinangamso
author_facet Haarhoff, Mandisa
Nkopo, Athinangamso
author_sort Nkopo, Athinangamso
collection Thesis
description This dissertation, using the theoretical framework of Afropessimism, discusses how Blackness is an ethico-political structure, in which the slave's natal alienation and social death establishes the resilient forms of Black (non)being. This project centrally argues against locating a theory of the production of Blackness in the socio-political relations of colonial subjugation, and instead proposes that Blackness is a structure, an ‘abstract code', that must be understood as deriving from racial slavery. This thought enterprise is explored in relation to South African histories of slavery to re-claim the concept of “social death” as inaugurating the structure of Blackness in Southern Africa. By suggesting how it is the absolute negation of the Black slave that creates the conditions for the possibility of the political, ethical, and civil subject – indeed, the very possibility of the Human, this study presents a discussion on how Black studies requires both a temporal and geographical reconstruction in understanding – firstly by extending much further ‘back' than the moment of South African colonialism, and secondly, by expanding the geographies of Blackness beyond European colonial rule. Furthermore, this study explores and exposes the limits of several major South African forms of political and philosophical thought and campaigns for Black emancipation: feminism, liberalism, Marxism, and Black Consciousness. An exploration which serves to highlight how the existing historiography of South Africa has disarticulated the conceptual significance of racial slavery to the making of Blackness in a way that locates it specifically in social death, with all its implications for Black (non)being. While recognizing that the political structure of Blackness precedes or cannot be located in the mechanics of South African colonial settlements, this dissertation exposes the limits and failures of a civil politics of Blackness in both national liberation and ‘progressive' struggles.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38109
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:13.838Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher African Studies
publisherStr African Studies
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38109 Blackness as a question of freedom: racial blackness in South African emancipatory thought Nkopo, Athinangamso Haarhoff, Mandisa African Studies This dissertation, using the theoretical framework of Afropessimism, discusses how Blackness is an ethico-political structure, in which the slave's natal alienation and social death establishes the resilient forms of Black (non)being. This project centrally argues against locating a theory of the production of Blackness in the socio-political relations of colonial subjugation, and instead proposes that Blackness is a structure, an ‘abstract code', that must be understood as deriving from racial slavery. This thought enterprise is explored in relation to South African histories of slavery to re-claim the concept of “social death” as inaugurating the structure of Blackness in Southern Africa. By suggesting how it is the absolute negation of the Black slave that creates the conditions for the possibility of the political, ethical, and civil subject – indeed, the very possibility of the Human, this study presents a discussion on how Black studies requires both a temporal and geographical reconstruction in understanding – firstly by extending much further ‘back' than the moment of South African colonialism, and secondly, by expanding the geographies of Blackness beyond European colonial rule. Furthermore, this study explores and exposes the limits of several major South African forms of political and philosophical thought and campaigns for Black emancipation: feminism, liberalism, Marxism, and Black Consciousness. An exploration which serves to highlight how the existing historiography of South Africa has disarticulated the conceptual significance of racial slavery to the making of Blackness in a way that locates it specifically in social death, with all its implications for Black (non)being. While recognizing that the political structure of Blackness precedes or cannot be located in the mechanics of South African colonial settlements, this dissertation exposes the limits and failures of a civil politics of Blackness in both national liberation and ‘progressive' struggles. 2023-07-14T10:55:08Z 2023-07-14T10:55:08Z 2023 2023-07-14T10:54:55Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38109 eng application/pdf African Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle African Studies
Nkopo, Athinangamso
Blackness as a question of freedom: racial blackness in South African emancipatory thought
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Blackness as a question of freedom: racial blackness in South African emancipatory thought
title_full Blackness as a question of freedom: racial blackness in South African emancipatory thought
title_fullStr Blackness as a question of freedom: racial blackness in South African emancipatory thought
title_full_unstemmed Blackness as a question of freedom: racial blackness in South African emancipatory thought
title_short Blackness as a question of freedom: racial blackness in South African emancipatory thought
title_sort blackness as a question of freedom racial blackness in south african emancipatory thought
topic African Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38109
work_keys_str_mv AT nkopoathinangamso blacknessasaquestionoffreedomracialblacknessinsouthafricanemancipatorythought