Available Formats
Class, Work and Whiteness: Race and Settler Colonialism in Southern Rhodesia, 191979
By (Author) Nicola Ginsburgh
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
15th March 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Colonialism and imperialism
African history
305.56208909
Paperback
288
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 15mm
413g
This book offers the first comprehensive history of white workers from the end of the First World War to Zimbabwean independence in 1980.
It reveals how white worker identity was constituted, examines the white labouring class as an ethnically and nationally heterogeneous formation comprised of both men and women, and emphasises the active participation of white workers in the ongoing and contested production of race. White wage labourers' experiences, both as exploited workers and as part of the privileged white minority, offer insight into how race and class co-produced one another and how boundaries fundamental to settler colonialism were regulated and policed. Based on original research conducted in Zimbabwe, South Africa and the UK, this book offers a unique theoretical synthesis of work on gender, whiteness studies, labour histories, settler colonialism, Marxism, emotions and the New African Economic History.
'It takes a fine eye and a supple mind to trace and understand the finest grains of the class and racial struggles that unfolded in colonial central Africa from their earliest manifestations in white trade unions to the Rhodesian Fronts war against the insurgent Zimbabwean liberation movements. Ginsburghs study, thematically rich and informed by great sensitivity to comparative issues and transdisciplinary studies, brings out every nuance of those struggles by showing how, just beneath the tectonic plates of manifest contestation swirls the hidden magma of class, gender, race and, contingently constructed, identity.'
Professor Charles van Onselen, author of The Fox and the Flies and The Seed is Mine
Nicola Ginsburgh is a Postdoctoral Fellow with the International Studies Group at the University of the Free State, South Africa