Search results
Filter
41 results
Sort by:
Life After Plastic-Wrapped Bodies: COVID, the State and the Crisis of Social Reproduction in Rural South Africa
In: Anthropological quarterly: AQ, Volume 97, Issue 3, p. 449-480
ISSN: 1534-1518
ABSTRACT: This article explores the impact and implications of the South African state's adoption of a tough militarized, bio-medical, and essentially neo-colonial approach to the management of the COVID pandemic in the rural former Bantustans ("native reserves") of the country. It argues that, while the "war on COVID" produced new national legislation for all citizens, those living "with custom" in former homelands were said to possess cultural attributes that amplified the risk of infection and death. The paper focuses on how the state constructed measures for these spaces and managed social interaction and burials in the migrant heartlands. The paper suggests that families "living with custom" in the former homelands were treated differently from other citizens, existing in what Giorgio Agamben (2004) might call a "state of (greater) exception." Villagers used the metaphor of the gate closing on them (ukuvala isango) to describe their experience and exclusion during lockdown as customary practices were banned, local health facilities closed for deep cleaning, and bodies sealed in plastic at state hospitals and mortuaries. The latter measures disturbed rural families much more than police violence or the closure of government clinics because it presented a serious threat to social reproduction. The paper provides evidence of how families fought to restore conviviality by exhuming the bodies wrapped in plastic to allow them to communicate with kin and ancestors. It also shows how, after lockdown, vaccination was often treated as a family matter not an individual choice, and how families moved quickly to fix the spiritual insecurities wrought by COVID. The paper concludes with a harrowing account of the new epidemic of hunger and malnutrition that is stalking these landscapes as conviviality is not enough to secure survival. The paper highlights the limits of narrow bio-medical and individual rights-based approaches in dealing with health, livelihoods, and well-being in communities devastated by COVID in rural southern Africa.
The Rhythms of the Yards: Urbanism, Backyards and Housing Policy in South Africa
In: Journal of contemporary African studies, Volume 25, Issue 2, p. 205-228
ISSN: 1469-9397
The rhythms of the yards: urbanism, backyards and housing policy in South Africa
In: Journal of contemporary African studies, Volume 25, Issue 2, p. 205-228
ISSN: 0258-9001
World Affairs Online
Rhythms of the Yards: Urbanism, Backyards and Housing Policy in South Africa
In: Journal of contemporary African studies, Volume 25, Issue 2, p. 205-228
ISSN: 0258-9001
On Family Farms and Commodity Groups: Rural Livelihoods, Households and Development Policy in the Eastern Cape
In: Social dynamics: SD ; a journal of the Centre for African Studies, University of Cape Town, Volume 31, Issue 1, p. 157-181
ISSN: 1940-7874
Living together, moving apart: Home-made agendas, identity politics and urban-rural linkages in the Eastern Cape, South Africa
In: Journal of contemporary African studies, Volume 19, Issue 1, p. 129-147
ISSN: 0258-9001
World Affairs Online
Living Together, Moving Apart: Home-made Agendas, Identity Politics and Urban-Rural Linkages in the Eastern Cape, South Africa
In: Journal of contemporary African studies, Volume 19, Issue 1, p. 129-147
ISSN: 1469-9397
Special Issue: "Livelihood, Linkages and Policy Paradoxes": Living Together, Moving Apart: Home-made Agendas, Identity Politics and Urban-Rural Linkages in the Eastern Cape, South Africa
In: Journal of contemporary African studies, Volume 19, Issue 1, p. 129-148
ISSN: 0258-9001
The social life of Paraffin: Gender, domesticity and the politics of value in a South African township
In: African studies, Volume 56, Issue 2, p. 157-179
ISSN: 1469-2872
A Bed Called Home: Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape Town
In: Journal of contemporary African studies, Volume 13, Issue 1, p. 136-138
ISSN: 0258-9001
Between traders and tribalists: Implosion and the politics of disjuncture in a South African homeland
In: African affairs: the journal of the Royal African Society, Volume 93, Issue 370, p. 75-98
ISSN: 0001-9909
World Affairs Online
BETWEEN TRADERS AND TRIBALISTS: IMPLOSION AND THE POLITICS OF DISJUNCTURE IN A SOUTH AFRICAN HOMELAND
In: African affairs: the journal of the Royal African Society, Volume 93, Issue 370, p. 75-98
ISSN: 1468-2621
Angry men and working women: Gender, violence and economic change in Qwaqwa in the 1980s
In: African studies, Volume 53, Issue 1, p. 89-113
ISSN: 1469-2872
Squatting and the politics of urban restructuring in Transkei: The case of Cala
In: Journal of contemporary African studies, Volume 11, Issue 2, p. 88-108
ISSN: 1469-9397