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Ubuntu, Radical Hope, and an Onto-epistemology of Conscience

Swanson, D. M.

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Abstract

Via the evocation of a lived narrative related to witnessing Middle Eastern refugees’ attempts at entering into the European Union in September 2015, I draw connections between the political, ethical, spiritual and embodied, recognising their always-already be(com)ing enmeshed and relational. This narrative rendering enables an introduction to the African indigenous thought of Ubuntu. Ubuntu off of the human condition that brings into play the courage of radical hope and the hope of a more fully human existence, one that is more ethical and just than the globallylegitimised vulnerability and dehumanisation that the Middle Eastern ‘refugees’ struggling for safety and a viable existence are constituted within. Butler (2004, 20) reminds us that we are “constituted politically in part by virtue of the social vulnerability of our bodies”, ones “attached to others”, “at risk of losing those attachments”, and in the sense of Ubuntu, thus also at risk of losing our humanity as a consequence. I argue that it is through these attachments, in the surface-to-surface embodiments of our souls, in our ‘intersoular’ states and Ubuntu ways of being and knowing, that we can find a radical, ethical and courageous hope in the ontoepistemology of conscience, and thus become human.

Citation

Swanson, D. M. (2015). Ubuntu, Radical Hope, and an Onto-epistemology of Conscience. Journal of Critical Southern Studies, 3, Article 96-118

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date 2015-12
Deposit Date Dec 14, 2022
Publicly Available Date Mar 29, 2024
Journal Journal of Critical Southern Studies
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 3
Article Number 96-118
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/14601739
Publisher URL https://jcss.demontfortuniversitypress.org/articles/abstract/40/

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