BikoS (1987) I Write What I Like: A Selection of His Writings. Johannesburg: Heinemann.
2.
CraisC (1992) The Making of the Colonial Order: White Supremacy and Black Resistance in the Eastern Cape, 1770–1865. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
3.
MamdaniM (1996) Citizen and Subject: Contemporary Africa and the Legacy of Late Colonialism. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
4.
MamdaniM (2001) When Victims Become Killers: Colonialism, Nativism, and the Genocide in Rwanda. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
5.
MamdaniM (2012) Define and Rule: Native as Political Identity. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
6.
MamdaniM (2019) Place, interest and political Agency: Some questions for Michael Neocosmos. Social Dynamics45(3): 442–454.
7.
MamdaniM (2020) Neither Settler Nor Native: The Making and Unmaking of Permanent Minorities. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
8.
LazarusS (2015) Anthropology of the Name. Trans. Walker G. York: Seagull Books.
9.
LewisS (2015) Aubrey Mokoape’s Address to the Black Student Movement. 26March. Available at: https://youtu.be/VRezkc3U7-Q?t=340 (accessed 31 May 2021).
10.
NeocosmosM (1998) From people’s politics to state politics: Aspects of national liberation in South Africa. In: OlukoshiV (ed.) The Politics of Opposition in Contemporary Africa, pp. 195–241, Uppsala: Nordic Africa Institute.
11.
NeocosmosM (2010) From ‘Foreign Natives’ to ‘Native Foreigners’: Explaining Xenophobia in Post-apartheid South Africa: Citizenship and Nationalism, Identity and Politics. Dakar: CODESRIA.
12.
NeocosmosM (2016) Thinking Freedom in Africa: Towards a Theory of Emancipatory Politics. Johannesburg: Wits University Press.
13.
NeocosmosM (2020) The academic intellectual as knowing subject and the reason of the excluded: A response to Mahmood Mamdani. Social Dynamics46(1): 164–178.
14.
PoselD (2001) What’s in a Name? Racial Categorisations under Apartheid and Their Afterlife. Transformation: Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa47: 50–74.