Description
Apartheid, ironically, provided Grant Farred with the optimal conditions for thinking. He describes South Africaâs apartheid regime as an intellectual force that, âMade thinking apartheid, more than anything else, an absolute necessity.â The Perversity of Gratitude is a provocative book in which Farred reflects on an upbringing resisting apartheid. Although he is still inclined to struggle viscerally against apartheid, he acknowledges, âIt is me.â Unsentimental about his education, Farredâs critique recognizes the impact of four exceptional teachersâall engaging pedagogical figures who cultivated a great sense of possibility in how thinking could be learned through a disenfranchised South African education. The Perversity of Gratitude brings to bear the work of influential philosophers such as Martin Heidegger and Jacques Derrida. The book tackles broad philosophical conceptsâtransgression, withdrawal, and the dialectic. This leads to the creation of a new concept, âthe diaspora-in-place,â which Farred explains, âis having left a place before one physically removes oneself from this place.â Farredâs apartheid education in South Africa instilled in him a lifelong commitment to learning thinking. âAnd for that I am grateful,â Farred writes in The Perversity of Gratitude. His autopoiesis is sure to provoke and inspire readers.