The Politics of a South African Frontier. The Griqua, the Sotho-Tswana and the Missionaries, 1780–1840
This book publishes Martin Legassick's influential doctoral thesis on the preindustrial South African frontier zone of Transorangia. The impressive formation of the Griqua states in the first half of the nineteenth century outside the borders of the Cape Colony and their relations with Sotho-Tswana polities, frontiersmen, missionaries and the British administration of the Cape take center stage in the analysis. The Griqua, of mixed settler and indigenous descent, secured hegemony in a frontier of complex partnerships and power struggles.
The author's subsequent critique of the "frontier tradition" in South African historiography drew on the insights he had gained in writing this dissertation. It served to initiate the debate about the importance of the precolonial frontier situation in South Africa for the establishment of ideas of race, the development of racial prejudice and, implicitly, the creation of segregationist and apartheid systems. Today, the constructed histories of "Griqua" and other categories of indigenousness have re emerged in South Africa as influential tools of political mobilization and claims on resources.
Details
416 pages
Maps, tables, index
ISSN: 2296 6986
ISBN:
Print: 978-3-905758-14-6
PDF: 978-3-905758-55-9
Authors
with Ciraj Rassool of Skeletons in the Cupboard: South African Museums and the Trade in Human Remains, 1907―1917 (2000) and is the author of Subjugation and the Roots of South African Democracy: The Struggle for the Eastern Cape, 1800―1854 (2006) as well as Towards Socialist Democracy (2007), a far-reaching account of the twentieth-century world.