On Durban's Docks

On Durban's Docks
Author: Ralph Callebert
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Total Pages: 254
Release: 2017
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1580469078

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Offers a new approach to the study of labor on the subcontinent and globally, questioning the relevance of the predominant wage labor paradigm for Africa and the Global South.

On Durban's Docks

On Durban's Docks
Author: Ralph Callebert
Publisher:
Total Pages: 235
Release: 2018
Genre: Durban (South Africa)
ISBN: 9781580469111

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Reworking Citizenship

Reworking Citizenship
Author: Brady G'sell
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 408
Release: 2024-08-13
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1503639185

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In scenes reminiscent of the apartheid era, 2021 saw South Africa's streets filled with mass protests. While the country is lauded for its peaceful transition to democracy with citizenship for all, those previously disenfranchised, particularly women, remain outraged by their continued poverty and marginalization. As one black woman protester told a reporter, reflecting on the end of apartheid: "We didn't get freedom. We only got democracy." What obligations do states have to support their citizens? What meaning does citizenship itself hold? Blending archival and ethnographic methods, Brady G'sell tracks how historic resistance to racial and gendered marginalization in South Africa animate present-day contentions that regardless of voting rights, without jobs to support their families, the poor majority remain excluded from the nation. Through long-term fieldwork with impoverished black African, Indian, and coloured (mixed race) women living in the city of Durban, she reveals women's everyday efforts to rework political institutions that exclude them. Informed by her interlocutors, G'sell retheorizes citizenship as not solely tied to individual rights, but dependent on the security of social (often kinship) relations. She forwards the concept of relational citizenship as a means to reimagine political belonging amidst a world of declining wage labor and eroding state-citizen covenants.

A Prophet of the People

A Prophet of the People
Author: Lauren V. Jarvis
Publisher: MSU Press
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2024-03-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1609177525

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In 1910 Isaiah Shembe was struggling. He had left his family and quit his job as a sanitation worker to become a Baptist evangelist, but he ended his first mission without much to show. Little did he know that he would soon establish the Nazaretha Church as he began to attract attention from people left behind by industrial capitalism in South Africa. By his death in 1935, Shembe was an internationally known prophet and healer, described by his peers as “better off than all the Black people.” In A Prophet of the People: Isaiah Shembe and the Making of a South African Church, historian Lauren V. Jarvis provides a fascinating and intimate portrait of one of South Africa’s most famous religious figures, and in turn the making of modern South Africa. Following Shembe from his birth in the 1860s across many environments and contexts, Jarvis illuminates the tight links between the spread of Christianity, strategies of evasion, and the capacious forms of community that continue to shape South Africa today.

Death in Durban

Death in Durban
Author: Jon Zackon
Publisher: EndeavorMedia.ORIM
Total Pages: 339
Release: 2013-05-28
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1839010991

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From an author with “a chilling insight into the mean streets of South Africa” comes a crime thriller set before and after the fall of Apartheid (Robert Foster, bestselling author of The Lunar Code). South Africa, 1961. Danny Waterman is a young and idealistic newspaper reporter when he clashes with the corrupt Afrikaner detective Koos van Blatter. Koos is determined to take his revenge, and Danny is forced to flee the country. But he leaves behind the woman he loves, alone and vulnerable. Will she be Koos’s next victim? South Africa, 1996. Two years into the fall of Apartheid, the country is transformed. Thirty-five years after he fled the country, Danny is determined to seek justice at last. And discover the truth about the woman he once loved. Across the bleak South African veldt, the prey becomes the hunter. And a crime is about to be avenged. But once a man acquires a taste for killing, it may never leave him.

Power At Work

Power At Work
Author: Marcel van der Linden
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 354
Release: 2023-07-04
Genre: History
ISBN: 3111086550

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Between working men and women (which may include “free” wage earners, chattel slaves, indentured labourers, sharecroppers, domestic servants, and many others) and those employing them, there has always been a constant – mostly silent but sometimes overt – struggle concerning employers’ discretionary power and over the interpretation of formal and informal rules. There is a constantly shifting frontier of control, that is, an ongoing struggle for control in the workplace, with managers and supervisors trying to increase their power over their subordinates, and their subordinates, in reaction, trying to maintain and increase their relative autonomy. The detailed case studies in this volume span three centuries and cover different parts of the world. Still, they speak to each other in many ways, highlighting the fact that power at work, whether on the shopfloor or beyond, results from a wide range of complex interrelations. Between technological innovations and the ways in which they are actually implemented. Between the division of labour at the site of production or service provision and changing standards of social segmentation beyond the premises of the company, which can be reinforced – or weakened – by management strategies of utilizing labour power as well as workers’ reaction to these strategies. And finally, between politics in production, which shape the relations between capital and labour on the shopfloor, and state politics of production, which cannot be understood without reference to broader developments in economy and society.

Execution Dock

Execution Dock
Author: Anne Perry
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2010-02-23
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0345469348

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On the bustling docks along the River Thames, Great Britain’s merchant ships unload the treasures of the world. And here, in dank and sinister alleys, sex merchants ply their lucrative trade. The dreaded kingpin of this dark realm is Jericho Phillips, who seems far beyond the reach of the law. But when thirteen-year-old Fig is found with his throat cut, Commander William Monk of the River Police swears that Phillips will hang for this abomination. Monk’s wife, Hester, draws a highly unusual guerrilla force to her husband’s cause—a canny ratcatcher, a retired brothel keeper, a fearless street urchin, and a rebellious society lady. To one as criminally minded as Phillips, these folks are mere mosquitoes, to be sure. But as he will soon discover, some mosquitoes can have a deadly sting.

The Post-colonial Condition

The Post-colonial Condition
Author: D. Pal S. Ahluwalia
Publisher: Nova Publishers
Total Pages: 268
Release: 1997
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781560724858

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