We are Fighting the World: A History of the Marashea Gangs in South Africa, 1947-1999

Capa
Ohio University Press, 2005 - 200 páginas

Since the late 1940s, a violent African criminal society known as the Marashea has operated in and around South Africa's gold mining areas. With thousands of members involved in drug smuggling, extortion, and kidnapping, the Marashea was more influential in the day-to-day lives of many black South Africans under apartheid than were agents of the state. These gangs remain active in South Africa.

In We Are Fighting the World: A History of the Marashea Gangs in South Africa, 1947-1999, Gary Kynoch points to the combination of coercive force and administrative weakness that characterized the apartheid state. As long as crime and violence were contained within black townships and did not threaten adjacent white areas, township residents were largely left to fend for themselves. The Marashea's ability to prosper during the apartheid era and its involvement in political conflict led directly to the violent crime epidemic that today plagues South Africa.

Highly readable and solidly researched, We Are Fighting the World is critical to an understanding of South African society, past and present. This pioneering study challenges previous social history research on resistance, ethnicity, urban spaces, and gender in South Africa. Kynoch's interviews with many current and former gang members give We Are Fighting the World an energy and a realism that are unparalleled in any other published work on gang violence in southern Africa.

 

Conteúdo

1 Urban Violence in South Africa
1
2 The Anatomy of the Marashea
12
3 Making a Living
56
4 Urban Battlegrounds
91
5 Marashea on the Mines
115
6 Vigilantism Political Violence and the End of Apartheid
136
The Future of the Marashea
153
Marashea Interview List
157
Notes
163
Glossary
185
Bibliography
187
Index
197
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Sobre o autor (2005)

Gary Kynoch is an assistant professor of history at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He is the author of numerous articles on crime, policing, and violence in urban South Africa.

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