Race Decolonization and Global Citizenship in South Africa

About The Book

<p>Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu left an enduring legacy of forgiveness openness and solidarity in South Africa. This book looks at how the country's historic transition to democracy has not only changed the negative narrative about South Africa but has provided a model for a new form of ethical participation in the world. In addition to Mandela and Tutu this book considers South African cultural theorists poets and novelists such as J. M. Coetzee Nadine Gordimer Jakes Mda Njabulo Ndebele and Antjie Krog all of whom have engaged with the struggle to overcome the legacies of apartheid and create a more humane society. Most of these figures share common cultural and moral traits with Mandela and Tutu the most outstanding of which is their belief in the notion of global citizenship. In engaging the latter concept this work seeks to answer the following questions: How can we understand being human in a world that is increasingly marked by hatred of others? Can Mandela's vision of his society provide us with a theory of how to live in our globalized world? This wide-ranging volume will appeal to scholars and students of history African studies literature ethics and international affairs. CHIELOZONA EZE is Professor of African literature and cultural studies at Northeastern Illinois University Chicago Extraordinary Professor of English at Stellenbosch University and a fellow at Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Studies South Africa.</p>
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