The Globalization of White Supremacy
Countering the Spread of South African Apartheid Rhetoric
Bitter Grapes
An excerpt from ‘We Are All Fast Food Workers Now’
The Thick Line
On the impossibility of coming to terms with a dark past
Sing the Rage
Listening to Anger after Mass Violence
South Africa’s Momentous Local Elections
Four Ways African Universities Should Support Democracy
African universities need to redefine themselves and with greater urgency pursue a more vigorous democratization mission of their societies, given the spectacular failure of political leadership in the region to build quality democracies.
The challenge for African countries is how to mold democratically based models of citizenships in countries and regions ...
The Discarded and the Dignified – Part 6
From the Failed Witness to “You are the Eyes of the World”
Embodying the third
Returning to the beginning of this essay, I have tried to suggest how we might view the embodied rather than dissociated self state as part of the reconstruction of the third in the wake of trauma. In her discussion of the Gugaleto Seven case Gobodo-Madikizela (2013) described the ...
The Discarded and the Dignified – Parts 4 and 5
From the Failed Witness to “You are the Eyes of the World”
Witnessing as repair of the moral third
To imagine a way out of the binary of deserving and discarded requires envisioning a world governed by the third, in which our attachment to all beings as part of the whole is honored as real. That vision of social attachment is a condition ...
The Discarded and the Dignified – Part 3
From the Failed Witness to “You are the Eyes of the World”
Failed witnessing: The Drowned and the Saved
The pivotal function of the moral third in relation to collective trauma is constituted by the acknowledgment of violation by the others who serve as witness. At a social level this role is played by the eyes and voice of the world that watches ...
The Discarded and the Dignified – Parts 1 and 2
From the Failed Witness to “You are the Eyes of the World”
In this paper I make an effort to blend with my theoretical perspective some of my experience traveling in many parts of the world to places where my colleagues are struggling with the effects of violence and collective trauma either in the present or its aftermath. In addition to psychoanalytic ...
Reflections on a Revolutionary Imaginary and Round Tables
The new always appears in the guise of a miracle
This is the prepared text answering the question "What do we really know about transitions to democracy?" for the General Seminar of The New School for Social Research, March 19, 2014.
It was a quarter of a century ago, in 1989, that a new kind of revolutionary imaginary emerged, one that ...