Cover image for The poverty of ideas : South African democracy and the retreat of intellectuals
Title:
The poverty of ideas : South African democracy and the retreat of intellectuals
Author:
Gumede, William Mervin.
ISBN:
9781770097759
Publication Information:
Auckland Park, South Africa : Jacana Media, 2009.
Physical Description:
xiv, 258 pages ; 21 cm
Contents:
Building a democratic political culture / William Gumede -- Our intellectual dilemma : the pseudo-intellectuals / Leslie Dikeni -- Democracy, dissidence and the poet / James Matthews -- The spiritual life of the intellectual / Albert Nolan -- Meta-intellectuals : intellectuals and power / Grant Farred -- The role of evolutionary intellectuals : the life of Comrade Mzala / Jeremy Cronin -- The engaged intellectual : the life and work of Harold Wolpe / Dan O'Meara -- African intellectuals and identity : overcoming the political legacy of colonialism / Mahmood Mamdani -- Intellectuals, the state and universities in South Africa / Jonathan Jansen -- Taming the young lions : the intellectual role of youth and student movements after 1994 / Prishani Naidoo -- Gender and policy-making : terms of engagement / Shireen Hassim -- The strange case of schizophrenia in South Africa's gender politics / Helga Jansen-Daugbjerg -- Science and activism in opposition to Mbeki's AIDS denialism / Mandisa Mbali -- Ideas and power : academic economists and the making of economic policy / Vishnu Padayachee, Graham Sherbut.
Abstract:
"In a country where it has been suggested that the distinction requirements at schools be moved down from 80% to 70%, it is of grave importance that we evaluate the role of knowledge and what significance we attach to it. Do we respect and value the production of knowledge, or is contemporary South African society being 'dumbed down'? And if knowledge is no longer an essential commodity, do we have a need for a 'thinking class'; the intellectuals? Where are our great South African minds? Are they hiding in fear of our society's seeming intolerance of criticism and dissent? Eminent thinkers Leslie Dikeni and William Gumede examine how South African intellectuals have regressed from drivers of change in the Apartheid era to disenchanted ghosts that appear to fear critical engagement in The Poverty of Ideas. This title offers differing but critical evaluations of the responsibility of the progressive intellectual in a new democracy. During the struggle against apartheid intellectuals have spoken out and more often then not influenced the trajectory of events. But it appears that today's intellectuals are paralysed by fear of raising the ire of authority"--Kalahari.net website.
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