Abstract
In this article, we demystify the South African Defence Force's 32 Battalion and de-exceptionalize the apartheid military by connecting it to other colonial military communities, and apartheid governance more broadly. Drawing on oral history, autoethnography, and archival documents, we demonstrate the highly unequal, yet mutual, reliance of white authorities and elite Black women in the haphazard and improvised nature of apartheid military rule. Most women arrived at the unit's base, Buffalo, as Angolan refugees, where white military authorities fixated on their domestic and family lives. We examine the practical workings of military rule by considering three nodes of social surveillance and control. Elite Black women, known as "block leaders,"served as intermediaries, actively participating in the mechanics of military rule while also using their position to advocate for their community. Finally, we consider the ingrained violent patriarchal nature of life in the community by highlighting the nature of women's precariousness and labor.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 223-239 |
| Number of pages | 17 |
| Journal | Journal of African History |
| Volume | 65 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| Early online date | 20 Nov 2024 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© The Author(s), 2024.
Funding
We would like to thank Nathan Draluck, the editors, and anonymous reviewers for their feedback and support in helping this work reach publication. We would also like to thank Arianna Lissoni, Brian Ngwenya, Giacomo Macola, Alicia Decker, Jocelyn Alexander, Nada Helal, Robert Gordon, and Orlando Mucuta for reading earlier versions of this work. Will Gordon generously shared archival material with us. Tomsen Nore and Ally Cassiem polished our Afrikaans translations. We appreciate financial support that enabled this work from the Fritz Thyssen Foundation (Grant 40.19.0.022GE), the Swiss National Science Foundation (Grant P2SKP1_187626), the Social Science Research Council (International Dissertation Research Fellowship, 2022 cohort), and the Fulbright US Student Program (2022-2023 academic year cohort). Finally, the authors would like to thank each other.
| Funders | Funder number |
|---|---|
| Fritz Thyssen Foundation | 40.19.0.022GE |
| Swiss National Science Foundation | P2SKP1_187626 |
| Social Science Research Council (International Dissertation Research Fellowship) | |
| Fulbright US Student Program |
Keywords
- Angola
- apartheid
- colonial intermediaries
- military
- Namibia
- South Africa
- Southern Africa
- women