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We Are Fighting the World - A History of the Marashea Gangs in South Africa, 1947-1999 (Paperback, New)
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We Are Fighting the World - A History of the Marashea Gangs in South Africa, 1947-1999 (Paperback, New)
Series: New African Histories
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Since the late 1940s, a migrant African criminal society, known as
the Marashea has operated and around South Africa's gold mining
compounds. Comprising thousands of members involved in extensive
criminal networks, the Marashea were more influential in the
day-to-day lives of many black South Africans than were the agents
of the apartheid state. These gangs remain active in South Africa.
Much has been written about the problems of violent criminality and
the historical roots of South Africa's urban criminal culture. 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 are critical to an understanding of the violent
crime epidemic that today plagues contemporary 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 effectively challenges many of the
orthodoxies that have guided social history research on resistance,
ethnicity, urban spaces, and gender in South Africa. Kynoch's
interviews with many current and former gang members gives We are
Fighting the World an energy and a realism that is unparalleled in
any other published work on gang violence in southern Africa.Gary
Kynoch is an assistant professor of History at Dalhousie
University. Heis the author of numerous articles on crime, policing
and violence in urban South Africa.
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