This paper amounts to a series of discursive reflections on why industrial capitalism has assumed the shape that it did in southern Africa- and in South Africa particularly-during the two generations before the commencement of struggles for political independence in Africa. It is far from the last word on the subject. However, it tries to draw attention to an historiographical problem which has remained undeservedly submerged in recent works: the relationship between the labor process-what Marx often referred to as the hidden abode of industrial capitalism-and the social reproduction of the industrial workforce
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented April, 1975Almost from its infancy the Witwatersrand...
There is a tight historical connection between endemic labour scarcity and the rise of coercive labo...
Understandings of class have often been highly racialized and gendered. This article examines the ef...
This paper amounts to a series of discursive reflections on why industrial capitalism has assumed th...
The paper addresses the gap between two conventional Marxist readings of the relation between capita...
Recent debates on the economic history of the United States and other regions have revisited the que...
The core of my thesis is to present a Marxist interpretation of the process of industrialisation in ...
Doctoral Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg.In this study I have argued that BEE/...
This article is a contribution to and reassessment of the debate about the concept of ‘white labouri...
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented 18 March, 1985The view that the opening up of Africa...
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented August, 1987The relationship between manufacturing c...
Paper presented at the Wits History Workshop: The Witwatersrand; Labour, Townships and Patterns of P...
This entry reconsiders the relation between early colonial capitalism and European enslavement of Af...
African Studies Center Working Paper No. 35INTRODUCTION: This paper discusses the historical conditi...
This study focuses on British expansion in southern Africa during the last three decades of the nine...
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented April, 1975Almost from its infancy the Witwatersrand...
There is a tight historical connection between endemic labour scarcity and the rise of coercive labo...
Understandings of class have often been highly racialized and gendered. This article examines the ef...
This paper amounts to a series of discursive reflections on why industrial capitalism has assumed th...
The paper addresses the gap between two conventional Marxist readings of the relation between capita...
Recent debates on the economic history of the United States and other regions have revisited the que...
The core of my thesis is to present a Marxist interpretation of the process of industrialisation in ...
Doctoral Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg.In this study I have argued that BEE/...
This article is a contribution to and reassessment of the debate about the concept of ‘white labouri...
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented 18 March, 1985The view that the opening up of Africa...
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented August, 1987The relationship between manufacturing c...
Paper presented at the Wits History Workshop: The Witwatersrand; Labour, Townships and Patterns of P...
This entry reconsiders the relation between early colonial capitalism and European enslavement of Af...
African Studies Center Working Paper No. 35INTRODUCTION: This paper discusses the historical conditi...
This study focuses on British expansion in southern Africa during the last three decades of the nine...
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented April, 1975Almost from its infancy the Witwatersrand...
There is a tight historical connection between endemic labour scarcity and the rise of coercive labo...
Understandings of class have often been highly racialized and gendered. This article examines the ef...