Thursday, March 28, 2019

Industrialization and Race

Please read or listen to Born a Crime and read the following chapters for next week.

For Tuesday, be ready to describe a topic and preliminary sources for a short paper (1000-1500 words), which will be due on 4/12.

Reading Questions for Africans, chapter 11 (chapter 12 in kindle and 2nd editions):
  • How did the Witwatersrand goldfield differ from the Kimberly diamond mines?
  • Why were African miners wages so low?
  • How did rural economies and families adapt?
  • What were "distinctive features" of South African industrialization?
  • Following the Anglo-Boer War (if you don't remember what that is, look it up here), what did the British do to try to retain their supremacy over the Afrikaner South African Republic?
  • What was the Group Areas Act of 1950, and what made the government so powerful then?
  • Why was mass non-violent nationalism like Gandhi's not successful in South Africa?
  • What was the Soweto Uprising of 1976, and why was it important?
  • What was the significance of the township revolt of 1984? What were important international developments?
  • At the end of the chapter, the author says that there was a deeper reality than confrontation between the races. What was it?
Reading Questions for Short, Chapter 7:
  • What happened to the field of African history as "Africa entered a period of prolonged economic downturn and political turmoil"?
  • What is it about Africa that makes it seem like the continent is "locked in Permanent crisis"?
  • Who is Waa Kamisoko, and how has he adapted his traditional role to modern circumstances? What was most controversial?
  • What is the deal with the historical narratives of the Ndebele people? Heroes Day?
  • What was the "first major reorientation in the field" of African history in the 1970s?
  • What was the legacy of Marxist anthropology?
  • Why is witchcraft now a focus of historians?
  • What is your reaction to the photograph by the artist Samuel Fosso (figure 29) or the one above?
  • Who is Mobutu Sese Seko? check the wiki page
  • Who creates the dominant political narrative, and where can alternatives be found?
  • What was the mission of African historians after the colonial period?
  • What debates arose among historians and where did they mainly play out?
  • Explain the issue of the relationship between history and heritage?
  • How is the question relevant to the history of the slave trade and of South Africa?

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