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On Mabogo P. More’s Extended Thought
A01=Tendayi Sithole
African studies
Africana philosophy
Africana studies
Antiblack racism
apartheid
Author_Tendayi Sithole
Azania
Black Consciousness
black diasporic philosophy
black existentialism
black radical thought
black studies
blackness
Category=NHTR1
Category=QDHP
Category=QDHR5
Category=QDTS
continental philosophy
decoloniality
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eq_history
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existentialism
forthcoming
liberation
literature
phenomenology
philosophical anthropology
philosophy
South Africa
Steve Biko
tragedy
Product details
- ISBN 9781666959567
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 02 Apr 2026
- Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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Mabogo P. More’s understanding of philosophical anthropology as the project that is concerned about the human question profoundly impacted how he accounted for the very idea of a black point of view. This book investigates how More’s extended thought generatively engages in themes like the name, principle, antiblackness, blackness, and Azania. With a Black and decolonial intertextuality, it explores ways in which More viewed philosophy not as an abstraction, but as a concrete and material project, one he sought to turn toward calls for justice, for challenging the antiblackness that pervaded post-1994 South Africa, and for a liberated Azania. Demonstrating just how much the South African experience can contribute to the often North-American-centered field of Black studies, the book shows how a politics centered on Black social interests must navigate between the temptations of Marxism and liberalism in order to find its own way towards liberation. At the long arc of the human question, which is at the core of philosophical anthropology, More’s extended thought makes a case for being-black-in-the-world as opposed to being-black-in-an-antiblack-world.
Tendayi Sithole is professor of political science at University of South Africa.
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