Professor Suren Pillay

Head of African Studies and Linguistics and Director of the Center for African Studies
Head of African Studies and Linguistics and Director for the Centre of African Studies

Suren Pillay holds the  A C Jordan Chair in African Studies,  and  is Director of the Centre for African Studies at the University of Cape Town. His research focusses on political violence, citizenship and justice claims; and the politics of knowledge production and intellectual history; all concerned with the political and intellectual legacies of colonialism in the present. He was the principal investigator of the Mellon-funded project, Other Universals: Thinking About Politics and Aesthetics from Postcolonial Locations. Pillay’s most recent book is Predicaments of Knowledge: Decolonization and Deracialization of Universities (Wits Press 2025). His previous book  was the edited volume, On the Subject of Citizenship, Late Colonialism in the World Today (Bloomsbury Press: New York 2023). With Chandra Sriram he is also co-editor of the book,  Truth vs Justice? The Dilemmas of Transitional Justice in Africa (London: James Currey and Natal: UKZN Press 2011) winner of a CHOICE award from the American Publishers Association.  He holds an  MPhil, and a  PhD in Anthropology from Columbia University in New York. He is a previous editor of the journal Social Dynamics, and a current editor of the journals Transformation, and Postcolonial Studies.  He is a board member of the Program for African Social Research (PASR) and has held visiting fellowships and professorships at Sciences Po, Paris; Columbia University in New York, the Graduate Centre of the City University of New York, Makerere University, Uganda, and Jawaharlal Nehru University, India. He is also a visual ethnographer, having exhibited work mainly in the medium of photography.

Areas of Supervision

political violence, citizenship and migration,  settler colonialism, justice claimsdecolonizing knowledge; African intellectual history; political theory 

 

Course

ASL 2202F African Political Thought

ASL 4211F/ ASL 5202F Problematizing the Study of Africa 

 

Current Research

I am currently working on two research projects towards book publications.

The first, titled Napoleon Meets the Sphinx traces  the ways in which race as a modern phenomenon has shaped understandings of Africa and African Studies  in colonial and anti-colonial thought. 

The second is a long term study,  near completion,  focused on how political violence was understood during the anti-apartheid struggle, and later in transitional justice mechanisms, and into the postapartheid present.  It is provisionally titled  In the Shadows of Sovereign Force: Surviving Political Murder in a Settler Colony