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  1. Hace 4 días · In his 2020 book “Neither Settler Nor Native,” the political theorist Mahmood Mamdani offered the idea that South Africa’s transition was possible because of an extraordinary act of ...

  2. Hace 4 días · In his 2020 book “Neither Settler Nor Native,” the political theorist Mahmood Mamdani offered the idea that South Africa’s transition was possible because of an extraordinary act of creativity and imagination in which the holders of what were once seen as fixed, eternal and opposed identities — settler and native — mutually surrendered those identities and took on new ones, as fellow ...

  3. Hace 3 días · Mahmood Mamdani, a professor at Columbia University, makes two important points in his 2020 book Neither Settler Nor Native: The Making and Unmaking of Permanent Minorities: there’s no ...

  4. Hace 4 días · Schamus, James. “The ‘blurred lines’ of Columbia’s Task Force on Anti-Semitism,” Mondoweiss, 05.28.2024 Thakker, Prem. “Columbia Coincidentally Rewrites Disciplinary Rules Just in Time,” Intercept, 05.31.2024 Bazelon, Emily. “The Battle Over College Speech Will Outlive the Encampments

  5. Hace 2 días · Reading time: 4 minutes. South Africa Apartheid is not a metaphor for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. For some reason, many attempt to make a despicable conflation between the two, when they could not be more different. In Lydia Polgreen’s New York Times op-ed “South Africa is not a Metaphor,” she delves into the rise and fall in ...

  6. Hace 4 días · Mahmood Mamdani explains that ‘the more Western settlement a colony experienced, the greater was the violence unleashed against the native population’, as ‘settler colonization led to land deprivation’; see Mamdani, When Victims Become Killers: Colonialism, Nativism, and the Genocide in Rwanda (Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton ...

  7. Hace 4 días · In his 2020 book “Neither Settler Nor Native,” the political theorist Mahmood Mamdani offered the idea that South Africa’s transition was possible because of an extraordinary act of creativity and imagination in which the holders of what were once seen as fixed, eternal and opposed identities — settler and native — mutually surrendered those identities and took on new ones, as fellow ...