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18 October 2023 | Story Anthony Mthembu | Photo Charl Devenish
UFS Book Discussion
From left to right: Prof Wahbie Long, Prof Premesh Lalu, Prof Saleem Badat, and Prof Sarah Nuttall.

The University of the Free State (UFS) recently hosted three authors for a discussion titled ‘Apartheid’s Legacy: Ghosts, Psyche and Trauma’. The event was aimed at exploring the lasting legacy of apartheid with academics and writers who’ve recently published books related to the topic.

The authors included Professor Saleem Badat, Research Professor in the Department of History at the UFS and author of Tennis, Apartheid and Social Justice: The First Non-Racial International Tennis Tour, 1971 (published 2023); Professor Premesh Lalu, Founding Director of the Centre for Humanities Research at the University of the Western Cape and author of Undoing Apartheid (2022); and Professor Wahbie Long, Deputy Dean in the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Cape Town and author of Nation on the Couch: Inside South Africa’s Mind (2021).

Professor Sarah Nuttall, Professor of Literary and Cultural Studies at the University of the Witwatersrand, facilitated the conversation and described the authors as “people who have been embedded in trying to undertake that post-apartheid project, as we took it then, and people who have really tried to build institutions for a different kind of future”.

The discussion took place on 12 October 2023 at the Albert Wessels Auditorium on the UFS’s Bloemfontein Campus. Professor Vasu Reddy, Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Research and Internationalisation at the UFS, described the launch as a celebratory occasion. “Books are essential to the knowledge project. They shape our teaching, learning, and research, and engage scholars,” he said.

Examining apartheid’s legacy

Prof Badat discussed his book (Tennis, Apartheid and Social Justice: The First Non-Racial International Tennis Tour, 1971), which details the first non-racial tour of Europe by black tennis players. “The book is a description of the 1971 tour by this intricate group of six young people from ages 16 to 30, who are not provided opportunities of coaching or any of that within South Africa at the time,” Badat said.

Prof Lalu’s book (Undoing Apartheid) examines unresolved critiques of apartheid by taking the reader back to 1985. “The book is an attempt to turn against my own position in 1985 – which was that we will transcend apartheid – and return to the work of study to see what we might have missed and what we squandered in our haste in overcoming apartheid.”

Prof Long said his book (Nation on the Couch: Inside South Africa’s Mind) aims to understand the problem of violence using psychoanalytic terms. “I try to give a psychoanalytic reading of violence in South Africa; not violence in its conventional and interpersonal sense, but violence broadly understood, whether I am speaking of racism, economic inequality, or gender-based violence,” he said.

In addition to discussing their books, the panel explored several themes related to the topic, including the concept of stasis through each writer’s lens, as well as the idea of non-racialism and what it means to them.

News Archive

UFS in forefront with ASGI-SA initiative
2006-05-10

At the conceptualisation colloquium and stakeholder dialogue were from the left Dr Aldo Stroebel (senior researcher at the UFS Research Development Directorate), Dr Edith Vries (acting Chief Executive Officer of the Independent Development Trust) and Prof Frans Swanepoel (Director: UFS Research Development Directorate).

UFS in forefront with ASGI-SA initiative

Two staff members of the University of the Free State (UFS) have been appointed as members of the advisory board of the national programme for the creation of small enterprises and jobs in the second economy.  This programme forms part of government’s Accelerated and Shared Growth Initiative of South Africa (ASGI-SA).

Prof Frans Swanepoel, Director of the UFS Research Development Directorate and Dr Aldo Stroebel, senior researcher at the UFS Research Development Directorate, are working with a team of experts from the UFS on a draft implementation strategy for the national programme.  Both Prof Swanepoel and Dr Stroebel are also associated to the UFS Centre for Sustainable Agriculture.
 
“The strategy is being developed in collaboration with institutions like the Independent Development Trust, the Department of Agriculture, the National Development Agency and the Department of Trade and Industry,” says Prof  Swanepoel.  

The other team members of the UFS are Prof Basie Wessels, Director of the  Mangaung-University Community Partnership Programme (MUCPP) and Mr  Benedict Mokoena, project manager at the MUCPP.

Dr Stroebel was also member of the organising committee of a conceptualisation colloquium and stakeholder dialogue that was recently presented in Johannesburg.  The conference was attended by more than 400 delegates from government departments, higher-education institutions and civil society, including Dr Kobus Laubscher, member of the UFS Council.

The conference was facilitated by Ms Vuyo Mahlati, previously from the WK Kellogg Foundation’s Africa programme and opened by Ms Thoko Didiza, Minister of Agriculture and Land Affairs.   

“The colloquium formed the basis of an induction workshop during which a group of 150 individuals (50 teams of three) from all nine provinces, identified to initiate the implementation of the national programme, was trained and orientated towards an induction manual in collaboration with Hand-in-Hand, an Indian counterpart,” says Prof Swanepoel.

Dr Stroebel and Mr Benedict Mokoena formed part of the team to conceptualise and finalise this training manual.  The induction training includes a case study of a successful community self-help partnership model, namely the MUCPP at the UFS. Prof Wessels and Mr Mokoena are both playing a leading role in the further development of subsequent training initiatives throughout South Africa, in partnership with the relevant provincial departments.

“The involvement of the UFS in the programme is a compliment to us.  It reflects the value government sees in the use of academics and experts in the management of the ASGI-SA initiative.  It is also an indication of one of the aims of the UFS to play a role in South Africa and Africa and in the transformation and change that is taking place in our country,” says Prof Swanepoel.  

Media release
Issued by: Lacea Loader
Media Representative
Tel:   (051) 401-2584
Cell:  083 645 2454
E-mail:  loaderl.stg@mail.uovs.ac.za
10 May 2006

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