Mbeki’s ‘I am an African’ Speech: Mobilising Psycho-Political Resources for Political Reconstitution of Post-Apartheid South Africa

IF 1 4区 社会学 Q2 AREA STUDIES African Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-02 DOI:10.1080/00020184.2021.2012754
M. Seedat, S. Suffla, S. Ndlovu-Gatsheni
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Abstract

ABSTRACT We offer a critical reading of Thabo Mbeki’s ‘I am an African’ speech to illustrate how he foregrounded humaning, namely onto-epistemological recovery, as a key dimension of psycho-political reconstruction. Mbeki’s speech, delivered on the occasion of the adoption of South Africa’s democratic Constitution, was inherent to the larger quest to (re)imagine South Africa and (South)Africanness and assert independent Black intellectual thought. Positioning himself as an epistemic agent, Mbeki historicised that moment of adopting the Constitution and attempted to raise critical consciousness about the protracted struggle for democracy. He mobilised marginalised knowledge about the anti-colonial struggle to challenge forgetfulness and limited interpretations of South Africa’s negotiated settlement. Mbeki also invoked the idea of a relational ontology and hermeneutic love to effect an inclusive Africanity constituted of multiple histories and ‘races’. Mbeki, resisting Afro-pessimism, referenced the making of an inclusive Africanity against Africa as a generative place despite the colonial encounter, African humanism and South Africa’s aspirations for reconciliation as articulated by the ANC and the Constitution. Notwithstanding the psycho-political import of Mbeki’s speech, the process of humaning remains incomplete.
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姆贝基的“我是非洲人”演讲:为后种族隔离南非的政治重建动员心理政治资源
我们对塔博·姆贝基的“我是一个非洲人”演讲进行批判性解读,以说明他如何将人性,即本体-认识论的恢复,作为心理-政治重建的一个关键维度。姆贝基的演讲是在南非民主宪法通过之际发表的,是对(重新)想象南非和(南)非洲性以及主张独立的黑人知识思想的更大追求的固有追求。姆贝基将自己定位为一个知识分子,将宪法通过的那一刻历史化,并试图提高人们对争取民主的长期斗争的批判意识。他调动被边缘化的反殖民斗争知识,挑战人们对南非谈判解决方案的遗忘和有限解释。姆贝基还引用了关系本体论和解释性爱的概念,以影响由多种历史和“种族”组成的包容性非洲。姆贝基反对非洲悲观主义,他提到,尽管非洲遭遇了殖民主义,非洲人道主义和非国大和宪法所阐明的南非和解的愿望,但建立一个包容的非洲共同体,反对非洲是一个富有创造力的地方。尽管姆贝基的演讲具有心理政治意义,但人道主义进程仍未完成。
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来源期刊
African Studies
African Studies AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
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0
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