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African Women and Apartheid Dr Rebekah Lee (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)

African Women and Apartheid By Dr Rebekah Lee (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)

African Women and Apartheid by Dr Rebekah Lee (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)


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Summary

In this compelling study, Rebekah Lee explores the process and consequences of settlement through the everyday lives and testimonies of three generations of African women in Cape Town during the apartheid (1948-94) and post-apartheid periods.

African Women and Apartheid Summary

African Women and Apartheid: Migration and Settlement in Urban South Africa by Dr Rebekah Lee (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)

How did African women experience apartheid? How did they create a sense of belonging in a city that actively denied and resisted their presence? Through detailed analyses of women's management of domestic economies, their participation in township social organizations, their home renovation priorities and patterns of energy use, this study evokes a larger history of gendered and generational struggles over identity, place and belonging. It provides a deeper and more nuanced understanding of African women in apartheid and post-apartheid society, and of urbanization in South Africa.

African Women and Apartheid Reviews

'Rebekah Lee's work makes a major contribution to South African urban history, sociology and anthropology. It is a unique and sustained analysis of the experiences of African women of Cape Town. Her research techniques are particularly innovative and revealing.' - Professor William Beinart, African Studies Centre, University of Oxford, 'This book offers an extraordinarily rich contribution to the historiography of African urban life in South Africa and the importance of women's creation of a home to that process. It fills a gap in urban scholarship in South Africa since the mid-1950s, extending its scope to the post-apartheid era, and complements past scholarship on women's role in public resistance and defiance by showcasing the importance of women's everyday concerns with domestic economies. This is wonderful work, presented with lots of details, and revealing many insights because of its fresh combination of historiography and ethnography. African Women and Apartheid will find eager readers among historians and anthropologists with interests in South Africa, urban studies and gender.' - - Profess Karen Tranberg Hansen, Northwestern University

About Dr Rebekah Lee (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)

Rebekah Lee is Lecturer in the Department of History, Goldsmiths College, University of London. She has published on the social and cultural history of South Africa, and her research interests include gender and migration, religion, identity, health and material culture. She is currently engaged in a collaborative project on the history of death in Africa from c.1800 to the present day.

Table of Contents

TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction: Location, Method, Meaning Chapter One: Mapping Cape Town's Historical and Political Geography, 1948-2000 Chapter Two: Structure and Agency in African Households Chapter Three: Home Improvement, Self Improvement: Renovations and the Reconstruction of 'Home' Chapter Four: Hearth and Home: Energy Resourcing and Consumption in an Urban Environment Chapter Five: Beloved Unions?: Associational Life in Town Chapter Six: 'Moving' Memories, Urbanising Identities

Additional information

NLS9781784537852
9781784537852
1784537853
African Women and Apartheid: Migration and Settlement in Urban South Africa by Dr Rebekah Lee (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
New
Paperback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
2017-08-30
296
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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