University of Virginia, College and Graduate School of Arts and Sciences

Premesh Lalu, “Undoing Apartheid: Aesthetic Education" - Distinguished Visiting Scholar Lecture

March 24, 2023

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Professor Premesh Lalu is the former Director of the DSI-NRF Flagship on Critical Thought in African Humanities of the Centre for Humanities Research. Following an MA from the University of the Western Cape, he was awarded a MacArthur Foundation Doctoral Fellowship to read towards a doctorate in History at the University of Minnesota. In 2003 he successfully defended a doctoral dissertation titled “In the Event of History”. After sixteen years in the Department of History as an Associate Professor, Lalu was awarded an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant to convene a fellowship programme on the Study of the Humanities in Africa. He was promoted to full professor upon being appointed as Director of the Centre for Humanities Research in 2008. Lalu has published widely in academic journals such as History and Theory,  Journal of Southern African StudiesAfrika FocusJournal of Higher Education in AfricaKronos: Southern African HistoriesCurrent WritingAfrika FocusJournal of Africa, Middle East and Asian StudiesSocial Dynamics, and History in Africa. Lalu’s writing has appeared in newspapers and online platforms such as the Mail and GuardianDailymaverickAfrica is a CountryBusiness Day, the Cape Times as well as in edited publications. His book The Deaths of Hintsa: Postapartheid South Africa and the Shape of Recurring Pasts (2009) argues that a postcolonial critique of apartheid is necessary in order to forge a concept of apartheid that allows us to properly formulate a deeper meaning of the post-apartheid. He is co-editor of Remains of the Social: Desiring the Post-Apartheid (2017) and Becoming UWC: Reflections, Pathways and Unmaking Apartheid’s Legacies (2012). Lalu is a board member of the Consortium of Humanities Centres and Institutes, former chairperson of the Handspring Trust for Puppetry in Education, and former trustee of the District Six Museum in Cape Town, South Africa.

Wilson 142
11:00am-12:30 EDT