70 research outputs found
Not quite fair play, old chap: The complexion of cricket and sport in South Africa
This review essay explores the racial and social divides that have permeated cricket in South Africa
A flying Springbok of wartime British skies: A.G. "Sailor" Malan
This article, an expanded version of a 2008 public lecture, explores the life and
times of Adolph Gysbert ʻSailorʌ Malan, a South African who rose to prominence
as a combatant in the 1940 Battle of Britain and who, after his post-war return
to the Union, became a notable personality in liberal reform politics. A classic
Anglo-Afrikaner empire loyalist or ʻKingʌs Afrikanerʌ, Malan became ʻSailorʌ
through his interwar merchant marine service, joining the Royal Air Force in
the later 1930s. An exceptional fighter pilot, his wartime role as an RAF ace in
defending Britain turned him into a national hero, a migrating loyal Springbok
who had sprung selflessly to the defence of Great Britain. Subsequently, as an
ex-serviceman, Malan drew on his wartime sensibilities and beliefs to return to
political battle in his home country, in opposition to post-1948 Afrikaner nationalism
and its apartheid policies. The mini-biography of Sailor Malan analyses
several key life-story elements, including his seafaring apprenticeship, British
wartime identity and combat experience, and troubled relationship with post-
1945 South Africa as a gradualist liberal
Fording the Amazon
The original publication is available at http://www.sajs.co.za/In 1928, with the Wall Street Crash and the start of the Great Depression only a year away, prospects for
the Ford Motor Company still looked rosy. Henry Fordâs celebrated Model T had been a major success.
His firmâs new Model A was just around the corner and had already received 700 000 orders. But there
were flies in the ointment. Market competition from newer car manufacturers with lower production
costs was denting sales and squeezing profits. The wages of Fordâs mass assembly line workers could
not be slashed because they were the essential purchasers of the vehicles they produced. Suppliers
of key motor components, particularly the big rubber companies of Firestone, Goodyear and General,
would not discount their prices. Thus, although Fordâs factories continued to expand, allowing him to
maintain his status as the worldâs richest man at the pinnacle of his wealth and power, lowering the
vehicle production costs was becoming a preoccupation. Yet, the rising demand for rubber after the First
World War continually frustrated Fordâs plans.Publishers' versio
Springboks at the Somme: The making of Delville Wood, 1916
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented 21 October 1996In late-June 1916, Private James Ross of the 1st South African Infantry Brigade's 4th Regiment, South African Scottish, added a postscript to a letter despatched home to Cape Town from Sailly le Sec in the Picardy countryside. His mind and spirit instinctively forfeit to the green and
tawny fields of northern France, âsurely the neatest part of the globeâ, he wrote to his parents, âwhat impresses me most here is the colour ... the red of the poppies is breathtaking, and truly indescribable.â At this distance, Ross's observation seems almost a moment of providential
suspension; until present and future merged, he seemed blithely unaware that the grassy realm around him was a poisoned pastoral. Near Corbie, further along the British Fourth Army's line, a
resting fellow soldier, John Kilgour Parker, enjoyed a brisk sluicing in the Somme before idling away the 25th June, admiring the pipe bands of the 9th Division Black Watch or taking himself off to the sinewy challenge of tossing the caber against men of the 3rd Transvaal and Rhodesia
Regiment. Aware of the incongruity of his tranquil reserve situation as the war closed in upon the recently-arrived South African contingent, Kilgour Parker was made edgy by the interminable din of the massive British artillery bombardment of German defences, reflecting, 'so much for this comic fireworks war. I suppose that if we took things seriously, our nerves would probably go in a month'. Yet things were very soon to be taken seriously, and men like
Ross and Kilgour Parker would then find themselves advancing to the very border of their human sanity. For not far ahead lay the terrifying resolution of the Somme offensive, and in
particular the perforating shock of Delville Wood for South African forces
AprĂšs lâapartheid, enseigner lâhistoire
Cet article explore les changements affectant lâhistoire, ainsi que son dĂ©veloppement et son statut, dans les Ă©tablissements scolaires dâAfrique du Sud Ă lâĂšre de lâapartheid et de lâaprĂšs-apartheid. Sous le rĂ©gime du Parti national, lâhistoire du pays Ă©tait un Ă©lĂ©ment clĂ© du systĂšme Ă©ducatif, proposant une version du passĂ© de la nation qui lĂ©gitimait la domination de la minoritĂ© blanche. Lors des luttes populaires contre lâapartheid dans les annĂ©es 1970 et 1980, lâhistoire Ă lâĂ©cole sâest transformĂ©e de maniĂšre informelle en outil de rĂ©sistance intellectuelle. Cependant, sous le gouvernement de la majoritĂ©, le curriculum dâhistoire a dâabord Ă©tĂ© marginalisĂ©, puis rĂ©tabli dans son importance, avant dâĂȘtre Ă nouveau dĂ©laissĂ©. Les responsables politiques actuellement au pouvoir et certains spĂ©cialistes de lâĂ©ducation souhaitent rendre obligatoire lâenseignement de lâhistoire de lâAfrique du Sud, afin de rĂ©pondre Ă des objectifs nationalistes et patriotiques clairement affichĂ©s.This paper explores the changing nature, development and status of history in contemporary South African schools in the apartheid and post-apartheid periods. Under National Party apartheid rule, South African history was a crucial element of the educational system, as it provided a version of the national past which sought to legitimise the domination of a white racial minority. During the popular anti-apartheid struggles of the 1970s and 1980s, history at school level was transformed informally into a tool of intellectual resistance. However, under majority rule, the fortunes of the history curriculum have been cyclical â first marginalised, then restored to importance, then again neglected. Currently, there is a new call from ruling politicians and some educationists for South African history to be made compulsory in order to serve an explicitly majoritarian nationalist and patriotic agenda.Este artĂculo explora los cambios que afectan a la historia, su desarrollo y su estado en los centros escolares de SudĂĄfrica durante y despuĂ©s del apartheid. Durante el rĂ©gimen del Partido Nacional, la historia del paĂs fue un elemento clave del sistema educativo : proponĂa una versiĂłn del pasado de la naciĂłn que legitimaba la dominaciĂłn de la minorĂa blanca. Con las luchas populares contra el apartheid en los años 70 y 80, la historia en la escuela se convirtiĂł de manera informal en un arma de resistencia intelectual. Sin embargo, con el gobierno de la mayorĂa, primero se marginalizĂł el currĂculo de historia, luego se recuperĂł, para despuĂ©s volver a ser relegado a un segundo plano. Los responsables polĂticos actualmente en el poder y algunos especialistas de la educaciĂłn desean hacer obligatoria la enseñanza de la historia de SudĂĄfrica para responder a unos objetivos nacionales y patriĂłticos claramente expresados
Drugs
Throughout history, intoxicants were an important part of the war experience. The First World War was by no means an exception in that respect: its main "war drugs" were alcohol (mostly beer, brandy, rum, schnapps, wine, and vodka), morphine, and cocaine. These were both "prescribed" by military authorities and "self-prescribed" by soldiers. As in the past, the reasons for using drugs varied: from purely medical (killing the pain, anesthetizing, and energizing) to performance enhancement, from raising the fighting spirit to alleviating combat trauma, from strengthening bonds between companions to mitigating the fear of battle. Simultaneously and paradoxically, in many states temperance ideas gained in popularity and prohibitionist regulations were adopted
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