Study and revolt |
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Authors: | Adam Sitze |
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Affiliation: | Department of Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought, Amherst College, Amherst, MA, USA |
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Abstract: | This essay is an inquiry into the forms of life and writing that emerge in the relation between study and revolt. After an initial sketch of the problem of “normal emergency” as it presents itself in post-apartheid South Africa, the essay then turns to a first reading of Richard Rive’s 1990 novel Emergency Continued in order to ask about the relations of study and revolt under conditions of a state of emergency. To deepen its reading of Rive, the essay makes a detour into the utopian theory of education set forth in 1972 by Richard Turner. The essay then turns to a second reading of Rive’s Emergency Continued in order to elucidate the unexpectedly utopian kernel of that text. The essay concludes with a reading of Zoë Wicomb’s short story “A Clearing in the Bush,” and a reflection on the relation between study and revolt under contemporary conditions. |
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Keywords: | Emergency leisure revolt Richard Rive study Richard Turner Zoë Wicomb |
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