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Democracy as Death

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The revolution that brought the African National Congress (ANC) to power in South Africa was fractured by internal conflict.  Migrant workers from rural Zululand rejected many of the egalitarian va...
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  • 07 March 2015
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The revolution that brought the African National Congress (ANC) to power in South Africa was fractured by internal conflict.  Migrant workers from rural Zululand rejected many of the egalitarian values and policies fundamental to the ANC’s liberal democratic platform and organized themselves in an attempt to sabotage the movement. This anti-democracy stance, which persists today as a direct critique of "freedom" in neoliberal South Africa, hinges on an idealized vision of the rural home and a hierarchical social order crafted in part by the technologies of colonial governance over the past century. 

In analyzing this conflict, Jason Hickel contributes to broad theoretical debates about liberalism and democratization in the postcolonial world. Democracy as Death interrogates the Western ideals of individual freedom and agency from the perspective of those who oppose such ideals, and questions the assumptions underpinning theories of anti-liberal movements. The book argues that both democracy and the political science that attempts to explain resistance to it presuppose a model of personhood native to Western capitalism, which may not operate cross-culturally.


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Price: $34.95
Pages: 288
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 07 March 2015
ISBN: 9780520959866
Format: eBook
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List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
A Note on Translation and Transcription
Abbreviations

Introduction: The Question of Freedom
1. A Divided Revolution
2. The Habitus of the Homestead
3. Urban Social Engineering and Revolutionary Consciousness
4. Neoliberalism as Misfortune
5. Death in an Age of Wild Ghosts
6. Colonial Nostalgias and the Reinvention of Culture
Conclusion: On the Politics of Culture

Notes
Glossary of IsiZulu Words
References
Index