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ID117769
Title ProperAbahlali's vocal politics of proximity
Other Title Informationspeaking, suffering and political subjectivization
LanguageENG
AuthorSelmeczi, Anna
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Using as its point of departure the claim that today the urban is the main site for the abandonment of superfluous people, this article explores the emancipatory politics of the South African shack-dwellers' movement, Abahlali baseMjondolo. Based on a notion of political subjectivization as the appropriation of excess freedom, I argue that Abahlali disrupt the order of the 'world-class city' when they expose the contradiction between the democratic inscriptions of equality and the lethal segmentation of the urban order. In articulating their living conditions as the unjustified breach of the promise of 'a better life', the shack-dwellers prove their equality and thus emerge as political subjects. As the article argues, at the centre of this process is a political practice of speaking and listening that is driven by the imperative to reverse the distancing and delaying practices of an order that abandons them by remaining physically, experientially and cognitively proximate to the experiences of life in the shantytown.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Asian and African Studies Vol. 47, No.5; Oct 2012: p.498-515
Journal SourceJournal of Asian and African Studies Vol. 47, No.5; Oct 2012: p.498-515
Key WordsAbahlali ;  Abandonment ;  Political Subjectivity ;  Ranciere ;  Superfluous People ;  Urban Struggles