Steve Biko (1946-1977) was a South African activist and philosopher. He was born in King William's Town in the Eastern Cape, and grew up under the apartheid system, which separated South Africans by race and gave white South Africans almost all political, economic, and social power. He studied medicine at the University of Natal, one of the few universities that allowed Black students at that time, though they were kept in a separate section. There he became politically active and helped found the South African Students Organisation in 1968. He left the white-led liberal student movement because he believed that Black liberation could not be led by white people, even sympathetic ones: Black people had to lead and define their own liberation. He developed the philosophy of Black Consciousness, which argued that before political liberation could succeed, Black South Africans had to overcome the psychological damage of apartheid: the internalised sense of inferiority that the system had deliberately produced. He was banned, arrested, and tortured by the South African security police. He died in police custody in September 1977, aged thirty years old. His death caused international outrage and strengthened opposition to the apartheid regime.
Biko matters because he identified something that purely political approaches to liberation often miss: the psychological dimension of oppression. Apartheid did not only restrict what Black South Africans could do. It systematically taught them to see themselves as inferior, to value white culture over their own, and to look to white people for leadership and permission. Biko argued that as long as Black people internalised these beliefs, political liberation would remain incomplete. A Black government that continued to see the world through the eyes of white culture was not genuinely free. True liberation required a revolution in how Black South Africans understood themselves: a recovery of pride, dignity, and the conviction that their own cultures, values, and ways of thinking were worth building on. This argument, which draws on and develops the insights of Fanon and Césaire, has proven relevant far beyond South Africa. Wherever systems of oppression have worked by teaching people to devalue themselves and their own cultures, Biko's analysis of the psychology of liberation offers essential tools.
I Write What I Like (1978, Heinemann), the collection of Biko's writings and speeches, is the primary text and is accessible and direct. The introduction by Aelred Stubbs provides useful context. The film Cry Freedom (1987, directed by Richard Attenborough) dramatises Biko's life and relationship with journalist Donald Woods and provides an accessible introduction to his context and ideas. The Steve Biko Foundation website maintains accessible resources at stevebikofoundation.org.za.
Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks (1952) is the most direct philosophical influence on Biko and essential background reading.
Gail Gerhart's Black Power in South Africa (1978, University of California Press) is the most thorough account of the Black Consciousness movement.
Stokely Carmichael and Charles Hamilton's Black Power (1967, Random House) develops parallel arguments in the American context that Biko was aware of.
Black Consciousness was a form of Black racism that simply reversed apartheid's racial hierarchy.
Biko consistently and explicitly rejected this interpretation. His stated goal was a non-racial society in which race was not a basis for privilege or exclusion. Black Consciousness was a strategy for a specific historical moment: a means of recovering the psychological and political foundations for genuine liberation, not an end state. He argued that pretending race did not matter while the effects of racial oppression were still present was not genuine non-racialism but a way of maintaining the existing racial order under a different name.
Biko was opposed to all cooperation with white people.
Biko was opposed to Black organisations being led or defined by white people, even well-intentioned ones. He was not opposed to white anti-apartheid activism: he specifically argued that white people had an important role to play in challenging racism within white communities, and that this was where they could make their most genuine contribution. He had white friends and colleagues and engaged seriously with white thinkers and activists. His argument was about organisational autonomy and psychological self-determination, not about personal hostility.
Biko's ideas have been made irrelevant by the end of apartheid.
Biko's analysis of the psychological dimensions of oppression and the conditions for genuine liberation remains relevant wherever systems of oppression have taught people to devalue themselves and their cultures. Within South Africa, the ongoing inequalities of the post-apartheid period and debates about cultural identity and economic empowerment engage directly with questions Biko raised. Beyond South Africa, his framework has been applied to colonial and postcolonial contexts worldwide. The question of whether formal political freedom produces genuine liberation, or whether deeper psychological and cultural transformation is also required, is alive in many contexts.
Biko was primarily a political activist with no serious philosophical ideas.
Biko was a rigorous and original thinker who engaged seriously with existentialist philosophy, African communal philosophy, and the psychological literature on colonialism and oppression. His writing, collected in I Write What I Like, is careful and precise. His testimony when put on trial showed extraordinary philosophical and political clarity. He was also only thirty years old when he died: the scale of his intellectual achievement in so short a life is remarkable. His work is studied in universities in philosophy, political theory, and African studies.
For philosophical analysis of Biko's thought: Mabogo More's Biko: Philosophy, Identity and Liberation (2017, HSRC Press) is the most rigorous scholarly treatment. For the relationship between Black Consciousness and ubuntu philosophy: Thaddeus Metz's work on Ubuntu and its relationship to Black Consciousness is available in various academic journals. For the legacy of Black Consciousness in post-apartheid South Africa: the journal Transformation and the South African Journal of Philosophy publish ongoing debates about Biko's relevance to contemporary South African society.
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