chr 500-0bCHR Dark Textchr 500-0bchr 500-0b
  • About
    • Centre for Humanities Research
    • DSI-NRF Flagship
    • Partnerships
    • Funders
    • Reports
    • Staff
  • Iyatsiba Lab
    • LoKO
    • Sound Working Group
    • Documentary film
  • New Archival Visions
  • Research Platforms
    • Aesthetics and Politics
      • Factory of the Arts
        • About the Factory of the Arts
        • Convening the Factory of the Arts
        • Artists in Residence
      • Research Projects
    • Becoming Technical of the Human
      • Laboratory of Kinetic Objects
      • Research Projects
    • Migrating Violence
      • Research Projects
        • Political Theory and Philosophy
        • Trans-formative Consitutionalism
  • Research Chairs
    • NRF SARChI Chair in Visual History and Theory
      • Postgraduate bursaries and postdoctoral fellowships in Visual History & Theory
      • Postgraduate Module In Visual History, 2023 (HIS 735/835)
    • Charlotte Maxeke-Mary Robinson Research Chair
    • UK-SA Bilateral Digital humanities chair in culture and technics
  • Fellowship Programme
    • Fellows
    • Winter School
    • Visiting Scholars
    • Seminar Programme
  • Publications & Archive
    • Publications & Creative Outputs
    • Galleries
    • Video
    • Film
    • Podcast
  • News
    • Workshops
    • Conferences
    • Lectures
    • Special Meetings
    • Colloquia
    • Seminars
    • Arts Events
  • Contact
✕ When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to go to the desired page. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.
            No results See all results

            Undoing Apartheid

            The CHR's Premesh Lalu’s much anticipated new book, Undoing Apartheid, appears in November 2022 with Polity Press. The book responds to the CHR’s inaugural question of the meaning of post-apartheid freedom, especially through sustained research projects on aesthetic education, the becoming technical of the human, and communicating the humanities

            Undoing Apartheid – The book responds to the CHR’s inaugural question of the meaning of post-apartheid freedom, especially through sustained research projects on aesthetic education, the becoming technical of the human, and communicating the humanities. The book is the product of conversations with colleagues, graduate fellows, visiting scholars, and researchers at the Centre for Humanities Research (CHR) of the University of the Western Cape over more than ten years. Building on the debates and discussions of annual winter schools, local and international conferences and colloquia, and collaborations with site-specific engagements in Athlone and the rural town of Barrydale, the book responds to the inaugural intellectual inquiry of the centre aimed at overcoming the sensory ordering of apartheid while connecting the initial inquiry to the next phase of the CHR’s DSI-NRF Flagship project in the Greatmore Street Arts and Humanities Hub.

            Synopsis

            Post-apartheid South Africa still struggles to overcome the past, not just because the material conditions of apartheid linger but because the intellectual conditions it created have not been thoroughly dismantled. The system of ‘petty apartheid’, which controlled the minutia of everyday life, became a means of dragooning human beings into adapting to increasingly mechanised forms of life that stifle desire and creative endeavour. As a result, apartheid is incessantly repeated in the struggle to move beyond it. In Undoing Apartheid, Premesh Lalu argues that only an aesthetic education can lead to a future beyond apartheid. To find ways to escape the vicious cycle, he traces the patterns created by three theatrical works by William Kentridge, Jane Taylor, and the Handspring Puppet Company – Faustus in Africa, Woyzeck on the Highveld, and Ubu and the Truth Commission – which coincided with the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of apartheid. Through the analysis of these works, Lalu uncovers the roots of modern thinking about race and affirms the need to revitalise a post-apartheid reconciliation endowed with truth – if only to keep alive the rhyme of hope and history.

            Reviews

            “In this stunningly original work of intellectual and aesthetic history, Premesh Lalu offers a powerful theory of petty apartheid as a process of deindividuation and objectification through the manipulation of the senses. By excavating the psychotechnics of a century-long biological racism and its revelation in contemporary object-theatre, Lalu’s book illuminates a path toward an aesthetic education from which can emerge a post-apartheid world. An extraordinary achievement by South Africa’s leading historian and humanist.”-  Debjani Ganguly, University of Virginia

            About the author Premesh Lalu is Founding Director of the Centre for Humanities Research at the University of the Western Cape, South Africa.

            For 20% off Undoing Apartheid use the discount code P2022 at checkout at www,politiybooks.com

            FOR MORE INFORMATION
            PURCHASE

            Brilliant and necessary. In this luminous book, Premesh Lalu uncovers the brutal legacies of apartheid’s assault on sensual and perceptual life. Only an aesthetic education, he argues, can open up the true hope of post-apartheid future. Written with astute theoretical attentiveness, and with poetry at its heart, Undoing Apartheid is an inspiring blueprint for the aesthetic education it urges. In an era when attacks on the arts and humanities across the world are blatant, Lalu suggests where criticism and creativity might begin again: in Athlone, Cape Town, and in all the other communities across the world where partition and violence have wreaked their worst.

            – Lyndsey Stonebridge, author of Placeless People: Writing, Rights, and Refugees.

            What politics of knowledge, form of study, mode of education, will get us to the substantive work of undoing apartheid in the present? This is Premesh Lalu’s abiding and forceful question. To get there, we must go back, and deeper, into histories less of grand than of petty apartheid, newly alert now to how the latter both wedged itself in the circuits of sense and perception, he avers. These circuits left little room for escape or desire and found substantive contestation, one we would do well to harness today, Lalu suggests, in a cinematic consciousness, forged from the bioscopes of Athlone in 1985, growing behind the catch-all sociologies of ‘school boycott’ and ‘mass movement’. It was there, via the interval or gap of film form, that thought emerged and forged a mode of freedom to come. This was a sensibility of the after apartheid that, Lalu contends counter-intuitively, was closer to hand than what followed in its aftermath. In this desire was a redistribution of the senses that pointed, and points still, to an education, a form of study, that is able to charge and create the conditions for a freedom which cannot be known in advance. Lalu finds in object theatre a radical play of modes of racialization and freedom that give form to other futures surpassing the circularities of apartheid logics. Although questions of the post-apartheid and of non-racial futures have come under duress in recent critiques, Lalu offers a recalibration of how we might approach aftermath and regeneration and what we might need in order to hear and see their minor keys, potentialities, and entanglement with future time.

            – Professor Sarah Nuttall, Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research [WISER], University of Witwatersrand

            Share
            1

            Related posts

            June 27, 2025

            ‘5 indie art spaces in African cities worth knowing more about’, Kim Gurney in The Conversation


            Read more

            Diana Vives and The Sky Beneath at the Iyatsiba Lab. - Photographs by Retha Ferguson.

            June 23, 2025

            Diana Vives and The Sky Beneath at the Iyatsiba Lab


            Read more
            June 18, 2025

            Encounters Documentary Film Festival highlights: The Walk and The Shadow Scholars


            Read more
            June 17, 2025

            Workshop Announcement: Theory in/as Practice – Practice in/as Theory, Leuphana University, Lüneburg


            Read more

            Search

            ✕ When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to go to the desired page. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.

            Sign Up to our newsletter


            Stay up to date with the latest news and developments from the Centre for Humanities Research.




            Recent Media

            • The Herds
              April 9, 2025
            • Minister De Lille joins Net Vir Pret and the CHR at Barrydale’s annual Reconciliation Day Festival.
              January 10, 2025
            • Pro-Vocation: Roots and Wings 20-24 November 2024
              December 3, 2024
            Centre for Humanities Research

            2 weeks ago

            Centre for Humanities Research
            The CHR and UWC in conjunction with @EncountersDoc will be hosting a number of Encounters Documentary Film Festival Events at Iyatsiba Lab, Centre for Humanities and Research ,66 Greatmore Street(entrance on Regent Str) Woodstock, Cape Town Mon 23 June from 10:00 until 15:30Tues 24 June 2025 from 13:30 -16:00 For more info: www.chrflagship.uwc.ac.za/encounters-film-festival-highlights-the-walk-and-the-shadow-scholars ... See MoreSee Less

            Photo

            View on Facebook
            · Share

            Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

            Centre for Humanities Research

            2 weeks ago

            Centre for Humanities Research
            Happy to announce our second instalment of the Artist Forum Shakespear to GazaDate: Friday 27 June 2025Time: 11:00am - 1:00pmVenue: The CHR’s Iyatsiba Lab,66 Greatmore Street, Woodstock(enter via Regent St)More info and RSVP details: www.chrflagship.uwc.ac.za/artists-forum-shakespeare-to-gaza/ ... See MoreSee Less

            Photo

            View on Facebook
            · Share

            Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

            Centre for Humanities Research

            2 weeks ago

            Centre for Humanities Research
            May your wonderful memories live forever with us through your music Bra Teboho Moholo....Robala Ka Kgotso Mohlompehi ... See MoreSee Less

            Photo

            View on Facebook
            · Share

            Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

            Centre for Humanities Research

            3 weeks ago

            Centre for Humanities Research
            Throwback to the Sound Working Group listening session last Sunday with composer ,sound artist,and textile reseacher Leila Bencharnia. @leila.rufus ... See MoreSee Less

            Photo

            View on Facebook
            · Share

            Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

            Centre for Humanities Research

            3 weeks ago

            Centre for Humanities Research
            Save the date: Encounters Film Festival, 19-29 June Watch out for CHR hosted events which will take place at the Iyatsiba Lab. More to follow ... See MoreSee Less

            Photo

            View on Facebook
            · Share

            Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

            Research Platforms

            • NRF SARChI Chair in Visual History and Theory
            • Andrew W. Mellon Chair of Aesthetic Theory and Material Performance
            • Factory of the Arts
            • Laboratory of Kinetic Objects
            • Seminar Programme
            • Publications

            Recently Added

            • ‘5 indie art spaces in African cities worth knowing more about’, Kim Gurney in The Conversation
              June 27, 2025
            • Diana Vives and The Sky Beneath at the Iyatsiba Lab
              June 23, 2025
            • Encounters Documentary Film Festival highlights: The Walk and The Shadow Scholars
              June 18, 2025
            ✕ When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to go to the desired page. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.

            SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER


            Stay up to date with the latest news and developments from the Centre for Humanities Research.



            © 2025 UWC | The Centre for Humanities Research. All Rights Reserved. Designed By Spotkolours Design
                      No results See all results