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His essay, “Judge Schreber’s Paranoia: Psychoanalysis, Mourning, and the Law,” is forthcoming. Coetzee, Thomas Pynchon, Marlene van Niekerk, Antjie Krog, Frank Smith, and Vanessa Place, and translations from the Afrikaans of essays by N.P. His interests range widely, with published essays on Primo Levi, Franz Kafka, J.M. Coetzee and His Doubles," a special issue of the Journal of Literary Studies published in 2009. He is editor of a special issue of the journal Diacritics on "Ethics" that appeared in winter 2005, and co-editor of "J.M. His most recent book is Learning Zulu: A Secret History of Language in South Africa (Princeton UP, 2016), an account, framed by his own endeavors to learn the language, of the psychopolitics of over a century of attempts by non-native speakers to learn Zulu. Among his other works are Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak: Live Theory (Continuum, 2006), and Ambiguities of Witnessing: Law and Literature in the Time of a Truth Commission (Stanford UP, 2007), an interdisciplinary analysis of testimony given before South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, a body that investigated human rights abuses committed during the apartheid era. He is the author of Complicities: The Intellectual and Apartheid (Duke UP, 2002), which analyzes the problem of complicity confronted during the apartheid era by South African intellectuals, and proposes a theory of intellectual responsibility. Educated in South Africa and the United States, Mark Sanders specializes in African literatures, literary theory, and interdisciplinary approaches to literature, law, and philosophy.