Introduction: On the Subject of Citizenship—Theorizing
Postcolonial Predicaments with Mahmood Mamdani Suren Pillay
1. Decolonizing the World: On Mamdani’s Thought (Kuan-Hsing
Chen)
2. Of Citizen(s) and Subject(s): Mamdani on Research, Methods, and
Commitments in Postcolonial Africa (Siba N’Zatioula Grovogui)
3. Thinking with Citizen and Subject (Talal Asad)
4. Beyond the Custom/Market Dichotomy: Women’s Rights to Land and
the Challenge of the Commons (Nivedita Menon)
5. Empire in the Era of DIY Colonialism: Barbarism or Slavery in
the (Post)Colonial Context? (Abdelwahab El-Affendi)
6. The Contemporary Challenge of Citizenship in Ethiopia and the
Role of Empire in the Making of Subject Populations (Namhla Thando
Matshanda)
7. Political Identity and Postcolonial Democracy (Karuna
Mantena)
8. Colonial Legacies of Ethnicized Violence, Gendered Subjectivity,
and Feminist Emancipatory Politics (Lyn Ossome)
9. The Bifurcated Society: Citizen and Subject in Contemporary
South Africa (Steven Friedman)
10. Predicaments of the Colonized: Being Coloured, Indian, and Free
after Apartheid (Suren Pillay)
11. The Legacy of Bandung (Partha Chatterjee)
12. Looking Back, Looking Forward (Mahmood Mamdani)
Index
Brings together reflections on citizenship, political violence, race, ethnicity and gender, by some of the most critical voices of our times.
Suren Pillay is AC Jordan Professor of African Studies, and Director of the Centre for African Studies at the University of Cape Town, South Africa.
In any studies of contemporary Africa and indeed the postcolonial
world, Mahmood Mamdani’s empirically grounded and theoretically
illuminating scholarship occupies a central place. It is therefore
inevitable for scholars to visit and revisit Mamdani’s work as they
reflect on current and pertinent issues of how colonialists ruled
Africa, what social orders were laid out, how violence was
deployed, how knowledge was colonized, and how the colonial
impinged on the postcolonial. I have nothing but praise for this
volume that is focused on Mamdani’s ever relevant scholarship.
Suren Pillay must be commended for assembling a stellar group of
scholars to reflect on Mamdani’s work in the advancement of
scholarship on Africa in particular and the postcolonial world in
general.
*Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni, Professor and Chair of Epistemologies
of the Global South and Vice-Dean for Research of the Africa
Multiple Cluster of Excellence, University of Bayreuth,
Germany*
This book offers a timely postface for Mamdani’s thought in
grappling with the possibility of inventing new political
futures.
*Politikon*
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