Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 154
Trim: 5½ x 8½
978-1-5381-6848-6 • Hardback • October 2022 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
978-1-5381-6849-3 • Paperback • October 2022 • $35.00 • (£27.00)
978-1-5381-6850-9 • eBook • October 2022 • $29.00 • (£21.99)
Drucilla Cornell is a distinguished Professor Emerita of Political Science, Women’s and Gender Studies, and Comparative Literature at Rutgers University a as well as Professor Extraordinaire of Law at the University of Pretoria (South Africa) and visiting professor at Birkbeck, University of London. She is the author and editor of over twenty books and numerous articles and is widely influential in the fields of feminist theory, legal theory, Continental philosophy, and South African jurisprudence. Her most prominent books include Beyond Accommodation: Ethical Feminism, Deconstruction, and the Law (1991; 2nd ed: 1999); The Philosophy of the Limit (1992); The Imaginary Domain: Abortion, Pornography & Sexual Harassment (1995); Moral Images of Freedom (2008); Clint Eastwood and Issues of American Masculinity (2009); and Law and Revolution in South Africa (2014). She is also the director of the uBuntu Project, a research and advocacy project into the role of indigenous values in the new constitutional dispensation in South Africa, which she founded in 2002.
Acknowledgements
Introduction - Revolution Today: Struggles That Shake Our World
Chapter 1 - Struggle in Motion: Rethinking Violence
Chapter 2 - The Struggle in Process: On Revolution and Black Liberation
Chapter 3 - The Spirit of Struggle: On Dialectical Materialism and Political Spirituality
Chapter 4 - Future Struggles: Stardust People and Democratic Socialism
Conclusion - Tomorrow’s Revolution: A Call to Action in Salvador Allende’s Last Words
Drucilla Cornell's Today's Struggle, Tomorrow's Revolution: Afro-Caribbean Revolutionary Thought is a firecracker of a book! Cornell draws on current events, scholarly erudition, and street protest to project Afro-Caribbean struggle as global revolution against racialized capitalism. Cornell calls for real economic democracy for global justice that de-centers Europe and the US.
— Naomi Zack, Lehman College, CUNY
With her typical insight and rigor, Cornell offers in this book a profound and provocative call to action. Drawing from a deep well of resources in Afro-Caribbean Philosophy, the South African shack-dwellers’ movement, and Black Lives Matter, this book articulates a vital and timely “political spirituality” directed toward a genuine human liberation.
— Michael J. Monahan, University of Memphis
Barack Obama has declared that uBuntu was Mandela’s greatest gift to South Africa and to humanity. By giving to that concept its full force and meaning as the open-ended project of achieving a new way of being human together, Drucilla Cornell’s book offers the most powerful demonstration of that statement.
— Soulemayne Bachir Diagne, director of the Institute of African Studies, Columbia University