1st Edition

The South African Tradition of Racial Capitalism

Edited By Zachary Levenson, Marcel Paret Copyright 2024
182 Pages
by Routledge

182 Pages
by Routledge

182 Pages
by Routledge

This book documents the emergence and development of the theory of racial capitalism in apartheid South Africa. It interrogates the specificity of this theory in the South African context and draws lessons for its global applicability. Racism and capitalism have a long history of entanglement. Nowhere is this more evident than in South Africa, where colonial and apartheid regimes used explicit... Read more

Introduction: The South African tradition of racial capitalism
Zachary Levenson and Marcel Paret

 

1. The context of struggle: racial capitalism and political praxis in South Africa
Andy Clarno and Salim Vally

 

2. Merely liberals? Du Bois and Plaatje as radical critics of racial capitalism
Mosa M. Phadi

 

3. Articulating difference: reading Biko-with-Hall
Ahmed Veriava and Prishani Naidoo

 

4. Bernard Magubane on the political economy of race and class in South Africa
Bongani Nyoka

 

5. Whiteness and racial capitalism: to whom do the ‘wages of whiteness’ accrue?
Zine Magubane

 

6. Reproducing ‘racial capitalism’ through retailing in South Africa: gender, labour, and consumption, 1950s–1970s
Bridget Kenny

 

7. Geographies of racial capitalism: the July 2021 riots in South Africa
Ashwin Desai

 

8. Racial capitalism: an unfinished history
Robin D.G. Kelley

 

Biography

Zachary Levenson is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Florida International University, USA, and Senior Research Associate in Sociology at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. He is the author of Delivery as Dispossession: Land Occupation and Eviction in the Postapartheid City (2022).

Marcel Paret is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Utah, USA, and Senior Research Associate in the Centre for Social Change at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. He is the author of Fractured Militancy: Precarious Resistance in South Africa after Racial Inclusion (2022).