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Black Consciousness and Progressive Movements under Apartheid
About this book
Accounts of Black Consciousness have tended to place the discourse in a continuum of resistance to white minority rule and to assess its significance in bringing about the downfall of apartheid. While these are valid historical narratives, they have occluded some of the wider resonances and significance of both the movement and the body of ideas. This book takes its cue from Steve Biko's own injunction to see the evolution of Black Consciousness alongside other political doctrines and movements of resistance in South Africa. It identifies progressive thought and movements, such as radical Christianity and ecumenism, student radicalism, feminism and trade unionism, as valuable interlocutors that nonetheless also competed for the mantle of liberation, espousing different visions of freedom. These progressive movements were open to what Ian Macqueen characterises as the 'shockwaves' that Black Consciousness created. It is only with such a focus that we can fully appreciate the significance of Black Consciousness, both as a movement and as an ideology emanating from South Africa in the late 1960s and 1970s. Black Consciousness and Progressive Movements under Apartheid thus presents an intellectual history of Black Consciousness in South Africa in the comparative perspective that Biko originally called for.
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: Putting Black Consciousness into Conversation with Progressive Movements under Apartheid
- Chapter 1: The Christian Roots of Black Consciousness
- Chapter 2: Black Consciousness and Student Protest in the Late 1960s
- Chapter 3: The ‘Durban Moment’, 1970–1974
- Chapter 4: Women’s Liberation and the Limits of Freedom
- Chapter 5: The Radicalisation of the Christian Institute
- Chapter 6: The State Responds
- Conclusion: From the 1970s to Post-apartheid South Africa
- Select Bibliography
- Index