From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Molotov Cocktail
File:Molotov cocktail.jpg
EditorJames Sanders, Ronald Suresh Roberts, Adam Rumball
CategoriesCultural-Political Magazine
Frequencyquaterly
First issue2007
CompanyPrivate
Country  South Africa
Language English
Website [1]

Molotov Cocktail initially appeared to be a contradictory mix, on one side there was its incendiary title, cover art of a hand poised to throw a lit petrol bomb, and the provocative subtitle , Dismantling the Master's House Brick by Brick. Then this in the first editorial: "Molotov Cocktai broadly backs the principles and policies of the African National Congress. We believe that discussing the African National Congress with insight and generosity will be more interesting and productive than condemning the party out of ignorance." A revolutionary magazine aimed at defending "the powers that be" with word bombs?

Publishing Information

Edited by James Sanders (initially with the help of Ronald Suresh Roberts and later alone) Molotov Cocktail captures the ambiguities of contemporary post apartheid South Africa, where despite the change of political power the majority of the media is still owned by a small white minority. As the editorial in the second issue explains, "In South Africa, many newspapers and magazines adopt a pose of neutrality that is essentially oppositional. Some of this derives from the 'anti-apartheid' history of the mining press but it is really a cover for a political agenda that attempts to impose an illiberal narrative onto news and politics. The print media has not transformed quickly enough and we hope to speed it along."

Content and Themes Information

Molotov Cocktail took a deliberately intellectual approach, defining itself as, "a platform where South African intellectuals will debate issues and engage in serious discussions about the direction that our country should take." It has featured everything from archival documents including long-lost SACP biographies and back issues of the SADF's Paratus, to new writing on cultural schizophrenia, oil, opposition, Zimbabwe, 'apartheid' in Israel, meeting a Nazi in SA, polo in Plett, Post-Polokwane: the new ANC, banking, crime and succession.

It also includes news, controversial profiles, satire, political gossip, book and film reviews, detailed media analysis and some literary critique. Graphics often take the form of illustrations, posters, political cartoons, power organograms and "how to" guides, including of course, "How to make a Molotov Cocktail".

Significantly, the magazine silenced critics who saw it as Pro-Mbeki mouthpiece by maintaining its editorial stance despite Thabo Mbeki's electoral defeat at the ANC conference in 2007.

To date the magazine has brought out 5 issues and established itself as a one of the few independent print voices, offering alternative news, views, critique and satire that challenge the mainstream media. This article uses text from chimurengalibrary.co.za under the GFDL

References Information

  • Molotov Cocktail
  • Paul Kirk, Roberts primes a bomb, The Citizen, January, 2007
  • The footnotes for Fit to Govern: The Native Intelligence of Thabo Mbeki By Ronald Suresh Roberts

External links Information

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Molotov Cocktail
File:Molotov cocktail.jpg
EditorJames Sanders, Ronald Suresh Roberts, Adam Rumball
CategoriesCultural-Political Magazine
Frequencyquaterly
First issue2007
CompanyPrivate
Country  South Africa
Language English
Website [1]

Molotov Cocktail initially appeared to be a contradictory mix, on one side there was its incendiary title, cover art of a hand poised to throw a lit petrol bomb, and the provocative subtitle , Dismantling the Master's House Brick by Brick. Then this in the first editorial: "Molotov Cocktai broadly backs the principles and policies of the African National Congress. We believe that discussing the African National Congress with insight and generosity will be more interesting and productive than condemning the party out of ignorance." A revolutionary magazine aimed at defending "the powers that be" with word bombs?

Publishing Information

Edited by James Sanders (initially with the help of Ronald Suresh Roberts and later alone) Molotov Cocktail captures the ambiguities of contemporary post apartheid South Africa, where despite the change of political power the majority of the media is still owned by a small white minority. As the editorial in the second issue explains, "In South Africa, many newspapers and magazines adopt a pose of neutrality that is essentially oppositional. Some of this derives from the 'anti-apartheid' history of the mining press but it is really a cover for a political agenda that attempts to impose an illiberal narrative onto news and politics. The print media has not transformed quickly enough and we hope to speed it along."

Content and Themes Information

Molotov Cocktail took a deliberately intellectual approach, defining itself as, "a platform where South African intellectuals will debate issues and engage in serious discussions about the direction that our country should take." It has featured everything from archival documents including long-lost SACP biographies and back issues of the SADF's Paratus, to new writing on cultural schizophrenia, oil, opposition, Zimbabwe, 'apartheid' in Israel, meeting a Nazi in SA, polo in Plett, Post-Polokwane: the new ANC, banking, crime and succession.

It also includes news, controversial profiles, satire, political gossip, book and film reviews, detailed media analysis and some literary critique. Graphics often take the form of illustrations, posters, political cartoons, power organograms and "how to" guides, including of course, "How to make a Molotov Cocktail".

Significantly, the magazine silenced critics who saw it as Pro-Mbeki mouthpiece by maintaining its editorial stance despite Thabo Mbeki's electoral defeat at the ANC conference in 2007.

To date the magazine has brought out 5 issues and established itself as a one of the few independent print voices, offering alternative news, views, critique and satire that challenge the mainstream media. This article uses text from chimurengalibrary.co.za under the GFDL

References Information

  • Molotov Cocktail
  • Paul Kirk, Roberts primes a bomb, The Citizen, January, 2007
  • The footnotes for Fit to Govern: The Native Intelligence of Thabo Mbeki By Ronald Suresh Roberts

External links Information


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