Cart
Free Shipping in the UK
Proud to be B-Corp

Red Africa Kevin Ochieng Okoth

Red Africa By Kevin Ochieng Okoth

Red Africa by Kevin Ochieng Okoth


£9.29
Condition - New
6 in stock

Summary

Salvaging a decolonised future

Red Africa Summary

Red Africa: Reclaiming Revolutionary Black Politics by Kevin Ochieng Okoth

Excavating the history of Marxism and Black revolutionary politics

Red Africa makes the case for a revolutionary Black politics inspired by Marxist anticolonial struggles in Africa. Contemporary debates on Black radicalism and decolonisation have lost sight of the concerns that animated their twentieth-century intellectual forebears. Okoth responds, challenging the claim that Marxism and Black radicalism are incompatible and showing that both are embraced in the anti-imperialist tradition he calls 'Red Africa'.

The politics of Black revolutionary writers Eduardo Mondlane, Amilcar Cabral, Walter Rodney and Andree Blouin gesture toward a decolonised future that never materialised - instead it was betrayed, violently sup- pressed, or erased. We might yet build something new from the ruins of national liberation, something which sustains the utopian promise of freedom and refuses to surrender. Red Africa is a political project that hopes to salvage what remains of this tradition.

Red Africa Reviews

Provocative and polemical, Red Africa probes the limits of contemporary discourses of Black Studies and returns to the neglected histories of Marxism on the continent, finding resources for charting new emancipatory futures. -- Adom Getachew, author of Worldmaking after Empire: The Rise and Fall of Self-Determination
A fiercely argued case for looking to the anticolonialism and Marxism of Red Africa in our current engagements with decolonisation. Okoth's critical assessment of certain variants of 'decolonial studies' and 'Afro-Pessimism' is welcome. -- Priyamvada Gopal, author of Insurgent Empire
This is an important defence of the emancipatory politics of Eduardo Mondlane, Amilcar Cabral, Frantz Fanon, and Walter Rodney from the reactionary perspectives of Afro-pessimism and African nationalism, raising the question of whether things might indeed have turned out differently had radical women such as Andree Blouin been more intimately connected with the struggle for self-determination. -- Firoze Manji, co-editor, Claim No Easy Victories: The Legacy of Amilcar Cabral
In this rigorous debut, political theorist Okoth revisits the philosophies of mid-20th-century African revolutionaries....Activists and readers interested in leftist political history will be enthralled. * Publishers Weekly *

About Kevin Ochieng Okoth

Kevin Ochieng Okoth is a writer and researcher based in London. He is part of the Salvage Editorial Collective and is a regular contributor to the London Review of Books. He holds an MPhil in Political Theory from the University of Oxford and regularly participates in conferences, speaking on themes related to anti-imperialism and twentieth century anti-colonial movements. He is a founding editor of Nommo Mag.

Table of Contents

1 Decolonisation and the Decline of the 'Bandung Spirit'
2 From Black Studies to Afro-pessimism: The Making of an Anti-politics
3 Racial Capitalism and the Afterlives of Slavery
4 Negritude and the (Mal)practice of Diaspora
5 Whose Fanon? On Blackness and National Liberation
6 Neo-colonialism, or, The Emptiness of Bearing One's Flag
7 Remnants of Red Africa

Additional information

NGR9781839767371
9781839767371
1839767375
Red Africa: Reclaiming Revolutionary Black Politics by Kevin Ochieng Okoth
New
Paperback
Verso Books
20231003
176
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

Customer Reviews - Red Africa