Richard Pithouse

Richard Pithouse

Dr. Richard Pithouse teaches politics at Rhodes University where he teaches contemporary political theory and urban studies and runs an annual semester long post-graduate seminar on the work of Frantz Fanon.








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Another Annus Horribilis for the ANC?

Picture: President of the country and of the ANC, Jacob Zuma with ANC Deputy Chairperson, Cyril Ramaphosa courtesy GovernmentZA/Flickr. Richard Pithouse - For a long time the ANC was able to sacralise its authority by invoking the key events, ideas and personalities of the struggle like Catholics recite the Stations of the Cross. However we have now reached the point where the power of that political liturgy to inspire and to discipline is in precipitous decline. Patronage and repression have contained some of the fallout. But despite the mobilisation of money and guns to shore up the party’s authority, new heresies, some with their own...

Best of SACSIS: Nelson Mandela's Crossing

Picture: Nelson Mandela courtesy Paul Williams/Fotopedia. Richard Pithouse -  [D]eath is always close by, and what's important is not to know if you can avoid it, but to know that you have done the most possible to realize your ideas. - Frantz Fanon, 1961. As a boy without a father of his own and living as a ward of the Thembu Regent, Jongintaba Dalindyebo, at his Great Place at Mqekezweni in the green hills of the Transkei, Rolihlahla Mandela heard stories about people like Nongqawuse and Makana, people who had passed into the realm of myth. When he washed...

Numsa v SACP

Picture: Blade Nzimande/SACP and Irvin Jim/Numsa Richard Pithouse - As Numsa head towards their special congress in Boksburg next week the tensions within Cosatu, and between Numsa and the SACP, are exploding. The critical question that is up for debate at the congress is whether or not the union should break with the ANC and support another party or set up its own party. If the union does decide to break with the ANC and set up a workers’ party its political credibility, solid organisational base and capacity to generate its own resources from its...

Tongaat Mall Collapse: The Boomerang Effect

Picture: ello.org Richard Pithouse - In 1961 Frantz Fanon described the colonial world as “cut in two”, divided into “compartments .... inhabited by different species”. For Fanon the creation of different kinds of spaces was central to the creation of different types of people and their ordering in a hierarchy of value. He concluded that the ordering of the colonial world must be examined to “reveal the lines of force it implies”, lines of force that “will allow us to mark out the lines...

Julius Malema: It's Just a Jump to the Left, And Then a Step to the Right

Picture: Julius Malema courtesy Gary van der Merwe/Wikimedia Commons. Richard Pithouse - Being against [one form of] evil doesn't make you good. - Ernest Hemingway, Islands in the Stream, 1952 Over the last ten years or so there has been an extraordinary degree of popular protest in South Africa. The seemingly incorrigible elitism of the higher reaches of our public sphere has meant that, particularly in the absence of sustained formal organisation, popular protest has seldom won the right to represent itself in this space. For years the media, NGOs, academy and political...

Bruce Springsteen Returns to Southern Africa

Picture: Bruce Springsteen courtesy Wikimedia Commons. Richard Pithouse - When Bruce Springsteen steps on to the stage in Cape Town on the 28th of January next year it will be his first performance in South Africa, but it won’t be his first connection to South Africa. In 1985 he, along with an impressive collection of musicians ranging from Miles Davis to Jimmy Cliff, Bob Dylan, Peter Garrett and the exiled South African band the Malopoets, was part of the project organised by Steven van Zandt, the original guitarist in his E-Street band, to boycott Sun City....