<span>Key book in Whiteness Studies that engages with the different ways in which the last white minority in Africa to give way to majority rule has adjusted to the arrival of democracy and the different modes of transition from "settlers" to "citizens".<br><br>How have whites adjusted to, contribut
Whites and Democracy in South Africa
β Scribed by Roger Southall
- Publisher
- James Currey
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 285
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Key book in Whiteness Studies that engages with the different ways in which the last white minority in Africa to give way to majority rule has adjusted to the arrival of democracy and the different modes of transition from "settlers" to "citizens".
How have whites adjusted to, contributed to and detracted from democracy in South Africa since 1994? Engaging with the literature on 'whiteness' and the current trope that the democratic settlement has failed, this book provides a study of how whites in the last bastion of 'white minority rule' in Africa have adapted to the sweeping political changes they have encountered. It examines the historical context of white supremacy and minority rule, in the past, and the white withdrawal from elsewhere on the African continent. Drawing on focus groups held across the country, Southall explores the difficult issue of 'memory', how whites seek to grapple with the history of apartheid, and how this shapes their reactions to political equality. He argues that whites cannot be regarded as a homogeneous political grouping concluding that while the overwhelming majority of white South Africans feared the coming of democracy during the years of late apartheid, they recognised its inevitability. Many of their fears were, in effect, to be recognised by the Constitution, which embedded individual rights, including those to property and private schooling, alongside the important principle of proportionality of political representation. While a small minority of whites chose to emigrate, the large majority had little choice but to adjust to the democratic settlement which, on the whole, they have done - and in different ways. It was only a small right wing which sought to actively resist; others have sought to withdraw from democracy into social enclaves; but others have embraced democracy actively, either enthusiastically welcoming its freedoms or engaging with its realities in defence of 'minority rights'. Whites may have been reluctant to accept democracy, but democrats - of a sort - they have become, and notwithstanding a significant racialisation of politics in post-apartheid South Africa, they remain an important segment of the "rainbow", although dangers lurk in the future unless present inequalities of both race and class are challenged head on.
African Sun Media: South Africa
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Cover
Contents
Illustrations
Preface
Abbreviations
Introduction
Part One
The Politics of White Rule
Putting the Liberal into Democracy
Securing the Transition? Whites and the TRC
Looking Back: Whites and the TRC Today
Part Two
White Hopes, Fears and Fate after 1994
Disillusion and Dystopia
Staying Put and Getting on with Life
Political Liberalism after Apartheid: The Democratic Alliance
Afrikaner Politics after Apartheid
Whites as Citizens
Part Three
Is There Still White in the Rainbow?
Appendix
Bibliography
Index
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