Abstract:
The starting-point for the article is to provide a brief background on the Ubuntu Project that
Prof. Drucilla Cornell convened in 2003; most notably the interviews conducted in Khayamandi,
the support of a sewing collective, and the continued search to launch an Ubuntu Women’s
Centre. The article will reflect on some of the philosophical underpinnings of ubuntu,
whereafter debates in Western feminism will be revisited. Ubuntu feminism is suggested as
a possible response to these types of feminisms. The authors support an understanding of
ubuntu as critique and ubuntu feminism accordingly as a critical intervention that recalls
a politics of refusal. The article ends by raising the importance of thinking about spatiality
through ubuntu, and vice versa. It may seem strange to title an article Ubuntu feminism when
feminism itself has often been identified as a European or Western idea. But, this article will
argue that ubuntu offers conceptions of transindividuality and ways of social belonging that
could respond in a meaningful way to some of European feminism’s own dilemmas and
contradictions. Famously, one of the most intense debates in feminism was between those
who defended an ethic of care in a relational view of the self, on one side, and those feminists
who held on to more traditional conceptions of justice, placing an emphasis on individuality
and autonomy, on the other side. The authors will suggest that ubuntu could address this
tension in feminism. Thus, in this article the focus will not simply be on ubuntu, in order to
recognise that there are other intellectual heritages worthy of consideration, other than those
in Europe and the United States. It will also take a next step in arguing that ubuntu may be
a better standpoint entirely from which to continue thinking about what it means to be a
human being, as well as how to conceive of the integral interconnection human beings all
have with one another. This connection through ubuntu is always sought ethically, and for
the authors it underscores what we have both endorsed as ethical feminism. In this essay it
is considered how ubuntu feminism could refuse the demands of patriarchy, as well as the
confines of liberal feminism. The authors are interested in thinking about ubuntu in general
as critique, as a critical response to the pervasiveness of a liberal legal order. Their aim is also
to explore tentatively ubuntu and spatiality – how could one understand ubuntu in spatial
terms, and more pertinently, how could ubuntu and ubuntu feminism relate to spatial justice?
Before turning to the theoretical discussion, some of the on-the-ground history of the Ubuntu
Project will be reviewed, including the Project’s attempt to build an Ubuntu Women’s Centre
in Khayamandi in the Western Cape, South Africa.