How did the Witwatersrand goldfield differ from the Kimberly diamond mines?
Why were African miners wages so low?
How did rural economies and families adapt?
What were "distinctive features" of South African industrialization?
Following the Anglo-Boer War (if you don't remember what that is, look it up here), what did the British do to try to retain their supremacy over the Afrikaner South African Republic?
What was the Group Areas Act of 1950, and what made the government so powerful then?
Why was mass non-violent nationalism like Gandhi's not successful in South Africa?
What was the Soweto Uprising of 1976, and why was it important?
What was the significance of the township revolt of 1984? What were important international developments?
At the end of the chapter, the author says that there was a deeper reality than confrontation between the races. What was it?
Reading Questions forSHORT, Chapter 7:
What happened to the field of African history as "Africa entered a period of prolonged economic downturn and political turmoil"?
What is it about Africa that makes it seem like the continent is "locked in Permanent crisis"?
Who is Waa Kamisoko, and how has he adapted his traditional role to modern circumstances? What was most controversial?
What is the deal with the historical narratives of the Ndebele people? Heroes Day?
What was the "first major reorientation in the field" of African history in the 1970s?
What was the legacy of Marxist anthropology?
Why is witchcraft now a focus of historians?
What is your reaction to the photograph by the artist Samuel Fosso (figure 29) or the one above?
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