Introduction: Mandela's Kinsmen
Education, Monarchy and Nationalism
The First Bantustan, 1954-1963
The Second Peasants' Revolt, Mpondoland 1960-1980
The Old Mission Schools, 1963-1980
The Comrade-King, Bantustan Politics, 1964-1980
Chris Hani's Guerrillas, 1974-1987
The Apartheid Endgame, 1987-1996
The New South Africa and Transkei's Collapse, 1990 onwards
Conclusion: African Nationalism and its Fragments
A study such as this one has several important implications.it
illuminates the shades of grey that are so common in history but so
easily overlooked.
*THE ROUND TABLE*
An extraordinarily rich book . . . An essential text for research
library collections and scholars working on South African political
history and contemporary politics (for there is much evidence that
these networks continue to run through the present-day ANC and its
rivals), and would also be suited for advanced graduate
students.
*INT'L JOURNAL OF AFRICAN HISTORICAL STUDIES*
Gibbs . . . offers one of the few sustained discussions of
nationalism and rural politics in South Africa, from the beginning
of apartheid during the 1950s to the politics of chieftainship and
tribalism today.
*JOURNAL OF INTERDISCIPLINARY HISTORY*
In this compelling study of Nelson Mandela's kinsmen, Timothy Gibbs
brings to life the powerful role that the Transkei, a former South
African homeland skirting the country's eastern coast, had played
in the nation's liberation struggle. . . . In this web of intrigue
that Gibbs spins together, he shows how the environment and the
values inculcated from it played a large political role in the
connections and relationships of people who would not have met
ordinarily.
*AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW*
Gibbs's book provides a refreshing challenge to studies of
insurgency that are rooted exclusively in economic factors or
rational choice methodologies. . Gibbs makes important
contributions to both the literature on insurgency and to the study
of South African politics.
*THE JOURNAL OF MODERN AFRICAN STUDIES*
The Transkei was a Potemkin state; this book effectively chronicles
how it really functioned and how it related to Mandela, the African
National Congress, and South Africa as a whole. Summing up: Highly
recommended.
*CHOICE*
'An important contribution to the field of recent South African
history... breaks new scholarly ground in its exploration of the
ambiguous relationship between the ANC and Bantustan elites.' -
*Colin Bundy, Honorary Fellow, Green Templeton College, University
of Oxford*
'Superbly done. It will gain a wide and deserved large readership,
and a respected one, within South Africa and academia generally.'
-
*Roger Southall, Professor Emeritus in Sociology, University of the
Witwatersrand*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |