ABSTRACT

Taking the postcolonial – or, more specifically, the post-apartheid – university as its focus, the book takes the violence and the trauma of the global neoliberal hegemony as its central point of reference.

Following a primarily psychoanalytic line of enquiry, it engages a range of disciplines – law, philosophy, literature, gender studies, cultural studies and political economy – in order better to understand the conditions of possibility of an emancipatory, or decolonised, higher education. And this in the context of both the inter-generational transmission of the trauma of colonialism, on the one hand, and, on the other, the trauma of neoliberal subjectivity in the postcolonial university. Oriented around an important lecture by Jacqueline Rose, the volume contains contributions from world-renowned authors, such as Judith Butler and Achille Mbembe, as well as numerous legal and other theorists who share their concern with interrogating the contemporary crisis in higher education.

This truly interdisciplinary collection will appeal to a wide range of readers right across the humanities, but especially those with substantial interests in the contemporary state of the university, as well as those with theoretical interests in postcolonialism, psychoanalysis, gender studies, cultural studies, jurisprudence and law.

chapter 2|16 pages

The Legacy 1

chapter 4|11 pages

The university now

What it will have been for what it is becoming

chapter 5|6 pages

Within the time of the aftermath

chapter 7|16 pages

The queer in decolonial times

Rhodes Must Fall and (im)possibilities in times of uncertainty

chapter 9|8 pages

On the materiality of #MustFall protest

Shame, envy, and the politics of spectacle

chapter 11|15 pages

Thoughts on the planetary

An interview with Achille Mbembe

chapter 12|12 pages

The afterlife

chapter 14|7 pages

Afterword