Run Racist Run
· Can we sometimes assume a racist motive?
· Is there place for anger in dialogue on racism?
· Can liberals be racist?
In Run Racist Run, Eusebius McKaiser explores the non-bloody aspects of contemporary South African racism. In a year when South African students have protested against colonialism’s continued presence on university campuses, when acts of racism continue to erupt in social spaces, when brutal racism is witnessed in the United States and elsewhere, it’s clear that we urgently need to journey into the heart of racism.
Eusebius McKaiser
Eusebius McKaiser is a political analyst, broadcaster, public speaker and lecturer. He studied law and philosophy, and is a former South African and World Masters Debate Champion. McKaiser is the author of A Bantu In My Bathroom and Could I Vote DA? A Voter’s Dilemma.
- • In McKaiser’s enormously provocative new book, he unpacks race and race relations in South Africa, in the aftermath of the #RhodesMustFall debates and its spin-offs.
- • McKaiser’s first book, A Bantu in my Bathroom, has sold over 12,000 copies in South Africa, the US, UK and Sweden.
- • McKaiser is the doyen of social media and is highly active on Twitter and Facebook. He has 108,000 Twitter followers, 5,000 Facebook friends and nearly 18,000 Facebook followers.
- • His columns are published in various newspapers, including The Star and the New York Times, and he has appeared on Al-Jazeera, Sky, and CNN’s Amanpour.