Posted: 

New book by alumnus Matthew Wilhelm-Solomon explores history of inner-city Johannesburg

A new book by alumnus Matthew Wilhelm-Solomon recounts the history of inner-city Johannesburg from 2010 to 2019, primarily from the perspectives of the unlawful occupiers of spaces known as hijacked buildings, bad buildings or dark buildings.

The Blinded City: Ten Years in the Inner-City Johannesburg is published by Picador.

Tens of thousands of residents, both South African and foreign national, live in these buildings in dire conditions. This book tells the story of these sites and the court cases around them, which strike at the centre of who has the right to occupy the city.

In February 2010, while Johannesburg prepared for the FIFA World Cup, the South Gauteng High Court ordered the eviction of the unlawful occupiers of an abandoned carpet factory on Saratoga Avenue and that the city’s Metropolitan Municipality provide temporary emergency accommodation for the evicted. The case, which became known as Blue Moonlight and went to the Constitutional Court, catalysed a decade of struggles over housing and eviction in Johannesburg.

The Blinded City chronicles this case, among others, and the aftermath – a tumultuous period in the city characterised by recurrent dispossessions, police and immigration operations, outbursts of xenophobic violence, and political and legal change. All through the decade, there is the backdrop of successive mayors and their attempts to ‘clean up’ the city, and the struggles of residents and urban housing activists for homes and a better life. The interwoven narratives present a compelling mosaic of life in post-apartheid Johannesburg, one of the globe’s most infamous and vital cities.

Matthew completed the DPhil in Develpoment Studies at ODID in 2011.

Matthew Wilhelm-Solomon (2022) The Blinded City: Ten Years in the Inner-City Johannesburg, Picador

Read a review in the Johannesburg Review of Books.

Read an extract in TimesLIVE.