Tony Trew (also known as
Anthony Andrew Trew) (
Cape Town, July 6, 1941) is a
South African politician and
discourse analyst. He was one of the editors of the seminal book
Language and control (1979), which helped establish
critical linguistics as an academic field.
He obtained a
BA in
Political Theory from the
University of Witwatersrand in
1962. His overt political compromise against
apartheid led to his being imprisoned from 1964 to 1965 for collaboration with noted activist
Edward Joseph Daniels; at his release he left the country for the
United Kingdom, where he continued his studies at
Oxford University. In 1970 he was appointed a lecturer at the
University of East Anglia, where he taught logic, history of science and discourse analysis. He left the university in 1980 to hold a post as Director of Research at the
International Defence and Aid Fund for Southern Africa, where he would remain until 1991; in this position he coordinated research on South Africa, as well as monitoring tasks in collaboration with
political dissenters and
NGOs.
He returned to South Africa in 1991 to work as senior researcher for the
African National Congress, and in 1993 he was selected as research coordinator for the Elections Commission of the ANC. A year later he was transferred to the Office of the
President as Director of Communications Research,a post he held until 1999. From 2002 he is Deputy
CEO at the office of Strategy and Content Management.
He was portrayed by
Trevor Sellers in the......
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