4.2 Article

The context of struggle: racial capitalism and political praxis in South Africa

Journal

ETHNIC AND RACIAL STUDIES
Volume 46, Issue 16, Pages 3425-3447

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/01419870.2022.2143239

Keywords

South Africa; racial capitalism; Neville Alexander; apartheid; struggle; conjuncture

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The South African critique of racial capitalism emerged during the struggle against apartheid and offered a conjunctural analysis that focused on time, space, and political praxis. It provided a theoretical framework for guiding political strategy and engaged in dialogue with radical intellectuals and global anti-colonial, anti-capitalist, and anti-racist movements.
The South African critique of racial capitalism was developed during the struggle against apartheid, as Black South Africans engaged in urgent debates about how to understand the system they were fighting and how to win liberation for all. Rather than arguing that capitalism has always been racial, South African radicals developed a conjunctural analysis of racial capitalism with attention to time and space. In this article, we focus on the work of Neville Alexander to develop two arguments about the conjunctural critique of racial capitalism. First, we argue that the conjunctural analysis was closely tied to political praxis. The critique emerged as a theoretical framework that could inform political strategy in a context of struggle. Second, we demonstrate that the conjunctural analysis was always global, situating South Africa within a world historical moment and engaged in dialogue with radical intellectuals and anti-colonial, anti-capitalist, and anti-racist movements around the world.

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