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This volume explores some of the key features of popular politics
and resistance before and after 1994. It explores continuities and
changes in the forms of struggle and ideologies involved, as well
as the significance of post-apartheid grassroots politics. Is this
a new form of politics or does it stand as a direct descendent of
the insurrectionary impulses of the late apartheid era? The scale
of popular protest in the 2000s does not rival that of the 1970s
and 1980s, but posing questions about continuity and change before
and after 1994, as some of these papers do, in itself raises key
issues concerning the nature of power and poverty in the country.
Contributors suggest that expressions of popular politics are
deeply set within South African political culture and still have
the capacity to influence political outcomes. Some chapters address
pre-1994 conflicts and movements, some post-1994, and some straddle
the two periods. The introduction by William Beinart links the
papers together, places them in context of recent literature on
popular politics and "history from below," and summarises their
main findings, supporting the argument that popular politics
outside of the party system remains significant in South Africa and
have helped to influence national politics. The roots of this
collection lie in post-graduate student research conducted at the
University of Oxford in the early twenty-first century.
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