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Apartheid remains / Sharad Chari.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: ErrantriesPublisher: Durham : Duke University Press, 2024Description: xxiv, 460 pages, 12 unnumbered pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781478030416
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Apartheid remains.DDC classification:
  • 968.45505 CHA 23 022613
Contents:
Remains of a camp : biopolitical fantasies of a "White man's country," 1902-1904 -- Settlements of memory : forgeries of life in common, 1900-1930s -- Ruinous foundations of progressive segregation, 1920s-1950s -- The birth of biopolitical struggle, 1940s -- The science fiction of apartheid's spatial fix, 1948-1970s -- The theologico-political moment, 1970s -- The insurrectionist moment : armed struggle, 1960s-1980s -- The moment of uban revolution, 1980s -- The moment of the disqualified, 1980s-2000s -- Conclusion: Accumulating remains : rhythms of expectation -- Coda: Black Atlantic to Indian Ocean, Afrofuture as the common.
Summary: "Apartheid Remains explores spatial segregation and racial capitalism in the Indian Ocean city of Durban, South Africa, both preceding and in the wake of apartheid, from the late nineteenth to early twentieth century. Sharad Chari argues that efforts to address the crises of racial capitalism through spatial fixes have produced new contradictions and struggles, and he investigates how state and capital forces harness biopolitical discourse in this circular struggle. Across the book's chapters, a Black Marxist-feminist framework is used to analyze the recursive, racialized state violence of biopolitics, proving a need for "theory in action" or the active engagement with communities affected by and protesting their conditions, as demonstrated through a palimpsest of documentary photography, interviews, ethnography, and archival work. Apartheid Remains offers a method and form of 'geography' attentive to the spatial, material and embodied remains of history. Varied struggles led by denizens of South Durban point beyond the anti-apartheid horizon to persistent imaginations of abolition of all forms of racial capitalism and environmental suffering that define our planetary predicament"--
List(s) this item appears in: New Collections - January 2025
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Book Book Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore 968.45505 CHA 022613 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available Gratis: Sharad Chari 022613

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Remains of a camp : biopolitical fantasies of a "White man's country," 1902-1904 -- Settlements of memory : forgeries of life in common, 1900-1930s -- Ruinous foundations of progressive segregation, 1920s-1950s -- The birth of biopolitical struggle, 1940s -- The science fiction of apartheid's spatial fix, 1948-1970s -- The theologico-political moment, 1970s -- The insurrectionist moment : armed struggle, 1960s-1980s -- The moment of uban revolution, 1980s -- The moment of the disqualified, 1980s-2000s -- Conclusion: Accumulating remains : rhythms of expectation -- Coda: Black Atlantic to Indian Ocean, Afrofuture as the common.

"Apartheid Remains explores spatial segregation and racial capitalism in the Indian Ocean city of Durban, South Africa, both preceding and in the wake of apartheid, from the late nineteenth to early twentieth century. Sharad Chari argues that efforts to address the crises of racial capitalism through spatial fixes have produced new contradictions and struggles, and he investigates how state and capital forces harness biopolitical discourse in this circular struggle. Across the book's chapters, a Black Marxist-feminist framework is used to analyze the recursive, racialized state violence of biopolitics, proving a need for "theory in action" or the active engagement with communities affected by and protesting their conditions, as demonstrated through a palimpsest of documentary photography, interviews, ethnography, and archival work. Apartheid Remains offers a method and form of 'geography' attentive to the spatial, material and embodied remains of history. Varied struggles led by denizens of South Durban point beyond the anti-apartheid horizon to persistent imaginations of abolition of all forms of racial capitalism and environmental suffering that define our planetary predicament"--

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