Research over the last few decades has supported the contention that ‘there are different literacy practices in different domains of social life ….[and] these change over time’ (Hamilton, Tett, & Crowther, 2012, p.3). In this article, we use ‘political literacy’, as conceived by Paulo Freire, as a theoretical lens through which to consider non-formal education in the changing context of South Africa. After considering the influence of Freire’s thinking in the black consciousness (BC) movement in South Africa during the 1970s, we consider a current BC-aligned non-formal education intervention in Freedom Park, a township outside Johannesburg, drawing on research conducted in 2018. This used snowball sampling and qualitative data collection methods, including observation of a ‘political class’ currently run in the community. We found that, in contrast to ways in which Freire was used in the BC movement in the anti-Apartheid struggle, the ‘political class’ leaned towards what Freire termed the authoritarian left.
CITATION STYLE
Thusi, Z., & Harley, A. (2020). ‘Political literacy’ in South Africa. European Journal for Research on the Education and Learning of Adults, 11(1), 77–90. https://doi.org/10.3384/rela.2000-7426.rela9148
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