Tafira, Kenneth Mateesanwa2014-01-152014-01-152014-01-15http://hdl.handle.net10539/13479Steve Biko returns and continues to illuminate the postapartheid social order. His contestation by various claimants for different reasons shows his continuing and lasting legacy. However he finds a special niche among a disenfranchised and frustrated township youth who are trapped in township struggles where they attempt to derive a meaning. More important is why these youth who neither saw nor participated in the struggle against apartheid are turning to an age old idea like Black Consciousness in a context of the pervasive influence of non-racialism, rainbowism and triumphalism of neo-liberalism. The realisation is that a human-centred society with a human face which Black Consciousness practitioners advocated and strove for is yet to be realised. This shows the anomalies and maladies of a postcolonial dispensation where ideals, principles and teleology of the liberation struggle are yet to be consummated. Thus Black Consciousness as a node in a long thread of black political thought in the country; and as a spirit, will always be both an emotion, and a motion that finds a new meaning with each generation.enBlack Consciousness Movement of South Africa.Blacks--Race identity--South Africa.South Africa--Race relations.South Africa--Politics and government--1994-South Africa--Politics and government--1994-Steve Biko returns : the persistence of black consciousness in Azania (South Africa).Thesis