Introduction -- Understanding race/ism -- Racism and the marginality of African philosophy in South Africa -- African philosophical hermeneutics : the critique of Eurocentrism and Ubuntu as a philopraxis for liberation -- The racism of history in South Africa -- A critique of the analytic conception of race -- An African philosophical critique of the liberal conception of non-racialism
Summary
"Our understanding of racism is that it is the systematic doubt concerning the humanity of the other. It is a means to an end, namely, to pursue the dehumanisation of the other for one's sole and exclusive benefit. The doubt is in itself ethically indefensible. Yet, it ultimately acquires the status of an incontrovertible truth around which economic and political life is organised and conducted. This has been and continues to be the reality in South Africa today. The hypothesis of this book is that a philosophical-historical study of racism will reveal that it has only ever been and continues to be white supremacy. In South Africa the actuality of the doubt is that it has always arisen from one side ("whiteness") and directed itself against the other ("blackness"). Our purpose is to show that racism properly speaking is white supremacy and that it cannot be properly understood without African philosophy."--Page 4 of cover
Analysis
South Africa Race relations History
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 141-151) and index