Do South Africans Exist? Addresses a gap in contemporary studies of nationalism and the nation, providing a critical study of South African nationalism against a broader context of African nationalism in general. Narratives of resistance, telling of African peoples oppressed and exploited, presume that ‘the people’ preceded the period of nationalist struggle. This book explores how an African ‘people’ came into being in the first place, particularly in the South African context, as a collectivity organised in pursuit of a political – and not simply cultural – end. The author argues that the nation is a political community whose form is given in relation to the pursuit of democracy and freedom, and that if democratic authority is lodged in ‘the people’, what matters is the way that this ‘people’ is defined, delimited and produced. He argues that the nation precedes the state, not because it has always existed, but because it emerges in and through the nationalist struggle for state power. Ultimately, he encourages the reader to re-evaluate knee-jerk judgements about the failure of modernity in Africa.
表中的内容
Acknowledgements
List of Acronyms
Introduction: The Sublime Object of Nationalism
Chapter 1: The Nature of African Nationalism
Chapter 2: The Democratic Origin of Nations
Chapter 3: African Nationalism in South Africa
Chapter 4: The South African Nation
Chapter 5: The Impossibility of the National Community
Chapter 6: The Production of the Public Domain
Chapter 7: The Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the Identity of ‘the People’
Conclusion: Notes Towards a Theory of the Democratic Limit
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index
关于作者
Ivor Chipkin is the founding director of the Public Affairs Research Institute linked to the University of the Witwatersrand and the University of Cape Town, which has been a pioneer in the field of institutional studies in South Africa, bringing social science methods to the study of government and how it works. He was an associate professor at the University of the Witwatersrand.