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Apartheid’s Leviathan - Electricity and the Power of Technological Ambivalence (Paperback)
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Apartheid’s Leviathan - Electricity and the Power of Technological Ambivalence (Paperback)
Series: New African Histories
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A fascinating study that shows how the intersection of technology
and politics has shaped South African history since the 1960s This
book details the development of an interconnected technological
system of a coal mine and of the Matimba and Medupi power stations
in the Waterberg, a rural region of South Africa near the
country’s border with Botswana. South Africa’s state steel
manufacturing corporation, Iscor, which has since been privatized,
developed a coal mine in the region in the 1970s. This set the
stage for the national electricity provider, Eskom, to build
coal-fueled power stations in the Waterberg. Faeeza Ballim follows
the development of these technological systems from the late 1960s,
a period of heightened repression as the apartheid government
attempted to realize its vision of racial segregation, to the
deeply fraught construction of the Medupi power station in
postapartheid South Africa. The Medupi power station was planned
toward the end of the first decade of the twenty-first century as a
measure to alleviate the country’s electricity shortage, but the
continued delay of its completion and the escalation of its costs
meant that it failed to realize those ambitions while public
frustration and electricity outages grew. By tracing this story,
this book highlights the importance of technology to our
understanding of South African history. This characterization
challenges the idea that the technological state corporations were
proxies for the apartheid government and highlights that their
activities in the Waterberg did not necessarily accord with the
government’s strategic purposes. While a part of the broader
national modernization project under apartheid, they also set the
stage for worker solidarity and trade union organization in the
Waterberg and elsewhere in the country. This book also argues that
the state corporations, their technology, and their engineers
enjoyed ambivalent relationships with the governments of their
time, relationships that can be characterized as both autonomous
and immersive. In the era of democracy, while Eskom has been caught
up in government corruption—a major scourge to the fortunes of
South Africa—it has also retained a degree of organizational
autonomy and offered a degree of resistance to those who sought to
further corruption. The examination of the workings of these
technological systems, and the state corporations responsible for
them, complicates conventional understandings of the transition
from the authoritarian rule of apartheid to democratic South
Africa, which coincided with the transition from state-led
development to neoliberalism. This book is an indispensable case
study on the workings of industrial and political power in Africa
and beyond.
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