ABSTRACT

Ubuntu is the African idea of personhood: persons depend on other persons in order to be. This is summarised in the expression: umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu, that is, a person is a person through persons.

This edited collection illustrates the power of fictionalised representation in reporting research conducted on Ubuntu in Southern Africa. The chapters insert the concept of Ubuntu within the broad intellectual debate of self and community, to demonstrate its intellectual and philosophical value and theoretical grounding in known practices emanating from the African continent, and indeed how it works to unsettle some of our received notions of the self.

part I|28 pages

Explanation

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

The unfolding story

part II|104 pages

The story

chapter 3|12 pages

Unseen

chapter 4|9 pages

The quilting group

Stitches from the soul

chapter 6|11 pages

The outsider

chapter 7|12 pages

A multicultural community

chapter 8|9 pages

The art of survival

Women and violence in Ubuntuville

chapter 10|10 pages

Discovering Ubuntu language

chapter 11|11 pages

Lost