Richard Pithouse

Richard Pithouse

Dr. Richard Pithouse teaches politics at Rhodes University where he teaches contemporary political theory and urban studies and runs an annual semester long post-graduate seminar on the work of Frantz Fanon.








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Durban Poison

Picture: sssteve.o/fickr Richard Pithouse - On the last day of September Nqobile Nzuza, a seventeen year old girl, was shot dead by the police near Cato Manor in Durban. She was unarmed and she was shot in her back and the back of her head. She was part of a large group of people who were gathering to organise a road blockade in protest at both oppression, in the form of violent and illegal evictions at the hands of the eThekwini Municipality, and the repression of resistance to the evictions in the form of two assassinations. The...

There Will be Blood

Picture: Thousands march on the Durban City Hall to defend dignity and demand land & housing on 16 September 2013 courtesy Abahlali baseMjondolo. Richard Pithouse - Nkosinathi Mngomezulu was shot in the stomach on Saturday morning. He was shot at the Marikana land occupation at Stop 1, Cato Crest in Durban during an eviction. He's currently in the Intensive Care Unit of King Edward Hospital. His comrades fear that he may be attacked in the hospital. They've not been allowed to post their own guard but they're making sure that he's always surrounded by a large group during visiting hours. Mngomezulu's comrades are not paranoid. He's been threatened...

Blood in the Streets of Santiago: Forty Years Since the Coup in Chile

Picture: Former President of Chile, Salvador Allende, courtesy Browse Biography. Richard Pithouse - Pablo Neruda, the great Chilean poet, was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1971 for “a poetry that with the action of an elemental force brings alive a continent's destiny and dreams". In his acceptance speech in Stockholm he cited Arthur Rimbaud, the wild teenage poetic genius of the Paris Commune of 1871: "In the dawn, armed with a burning patience, we shall enter the splendid Cities." Neruda declared that “my duties as a poet involve friendship not only...

Paranoia Stalks the Halls of Power

Picture: President Jacob Zuma and COSATU President Sdumo Dlamini courtesy GoverntmentZA/Flickr. Richard Pithouse - (T)he paranoid construction is … an attempt to heal ourselves, to pull ourselves out of the real "illness", the "end of the world", the breakdown of the symbolic universe. − Slavoj Zizek, Looking Awry: An Introduction to Jacques Lacan through Popular Culture, 1991 Sdumo Dlamini recently informed listeners of a Jo'burg radio station that a multi-headed snake was slithering through South Africa fermenting dissent against the ANC. In the lead up to Mangaung...

Promise & Peril at the Turn of the Tide

Picture: Mamphela Ramphele (Agang) and Julius Malema (Economic Freedom Fighters) courtesy Wikimedia Commons. Richard Pithouse - (T)he horses have vanished Heroes hop around like toads - Pablo Neruda, Right Comrade, It’s the Hour of the Garden, Chile, 1973 Writing after the French Revolution Immanuel Kant, the German philosopher, noted that “while the drama of great political changes is taking place” people “openly express universal yet disinterested sympathy for one set of protagonists against their adversaries”. Kant did not deny the limits, or even the horrors of the French...

Licenced to Kill

Picture: Moments before his death, Andries Tatane being attacked by police. Taken from screenshot of You Tube video. Richard Pithouse - Last week Inigo Gilmore’s documentary, South Africa’s Dirty Cops, was screened on British television. It deals with the torture and murder that have become common at the hands of the South African police and includes an examination of the two most high profile cases of political violence on the part of our police in recent years – the murder of Andries Tatane in Ficksburg in April 2011 and the Marikana Massacre in August last year. The scale of the Marikana Massacre, in...