In this article I address the problem of political self-definition in South Africa. I attempt to trace and explain the rise of political consciousness among the black people of South Africa and indicate that the rise of political consciousness was expressed in a Marxist attempt at political self-definition This attempt has conceptual connections with communitarian politics, which explains why it was so easily accepted by black people. Black Consciousness made room for a wider political consciousness which included elements of traditional communitarian politics and elements of Marxism
Bibliography: leaves 329-352.This thesis examines the ways in which Coloured identity manifested its...
Marxism was central to the understanding of South Africa’s struggle for freedom. This article provid...
Marxism was central to the understanding of South Africa’s struggle for freedom. This article provid...
Abstract: As the state of South Africa matures, questions attached to meanings of being ‘Black’ have...
Masters Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg.Abstract available in PDF.Quality of s...
This disquisition is an inter-disciplinary investigation into some dominant hegemonic narratives of ...
Papers presented at the Forum for Religious Dialogue Symposium of the Research Institute for Theolog...
An ironic feature of contemporary South African politics is that while the organisations representin...
This article gives some historical development of Black Consciousness, Black Nationalism and Black T...
Magister Philosophiae - MPhilPost-apartheid South Africa has strived for change through the implemen...
M. Adhikari, ‘Hope, Fear, Shame, Frustration: Continuity and Change in the Expression of Coloured Id...
This paper focuses on the psychologization of development in South Africa, one of the most unequal c...
The Black Consciousness Movement in South Africa has been criticized by a number of academic and non...
South Africa is one country where racial discrimination was widespread. Like the rest of the color-s...
In the late 1960s, “non-white” university students marched out of the white dominated but, at that s...
Bibliography: leaves 329-352.This thesis examines the ways in which Coloured identity manifested its...
Marxism was central to the understanding of South Africa’s struggle for freedom. This article provid...
Marxism was central to the understanding of South Africa’s struggle for freedom. This article provid...
Abstract: As the state of South Africa matures, questions attached to meanings of being ‘Black’ have...
Masters Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg.Abstract available in PDF.Quality of s...
This disquisition is an inter-disciplinary investigation into some dominant hegemonic narratives of ...
Papers presented at the Forum for Religious Dialogue Symposium of the Research Institute for Theolog...
An ironic feature of contemporary South African politics is that while the organisations representin...
This article gives some historical development of Black Consciousness, Black Nationalism and Black T...
Magister Philosophiae - MPhilPost-apartheid South Africa has strived for change through the implemen...
M. Adhikari, ‘Hope, Fear, Shame, Frustration: Continuity and Change in the Expression of Coloured Id...
This paper focuses on the psychologization of development in South Africa, one of the most unequal c...
The Black Consciousness Movement in South Africa has been criticized by a number of academic and non...
South Africa is one country where racial discrimination was widespread. Like the rest of the color-s...
In the late 1960s, “non-white” university students marched out of the white dominated but, at that s...
Bibliography: leaves 329-352.This thesis examines the ways in which Coloured identity manifested its...
Marxism was central to the understanding of South Africa’s struggle for freedom. This article provid...
Marxism was central to the understanding of South Africa’s struggle for freedom. This article provid...