This article reviews the recent upsurge of writing on the history of the early colonial Cape Colony from the VOC period to the early nineteenth century. It responds to important questions raised by Nicole Ulrich's review article of Contingent Lives in this issue. In particular it considers what is gained and what can be lost in the recent shift from class-based analyses characteristic of late twentieth-century revisionist South African historiography to research more influenced by the ‘cultural turn’, transnational and microhistorical approaches
This article attempts to assess the short and long-terrn effects of the South African War of 1899-19...
This book showcases new research by emerging and established scholars on white workers and the white...
In ‘The Rise and Fall of Afrikaner Women’ (2003), Gilliomee argues that Afrikaner women’s history ‘...
The revisionist literature of the 1970s approached social stratification in South Africa with the in...
Abstract: From the late 1970s, South Africanist social history of broadly Thompsonian characteristic...
In this article I argue that what enabled affiliation to the larger political project against apar...
In an influential article on the evolution of Afro-American society on the British mainland of North...
The acculturation of the Khoikhoi and the slaves in the Cape Colony (1652-1910) – a historiographica...
From the late 1950s, as independent African polities replaced formal colonial rule in Africa, South ...
In this article it is argued that, since the abuse of anthropology in the colonial and apartheid era...
This article uses historical evidence to track the invention of traditions in particular spheres of ...
Paper presented at the Wits History Workshop: The Making of Class, 9-14 February, 198
Review of S.E. Duff, Changing Childhoods in the Cape Colony: Dutch Reformed Church Evangelicalism an...
No abstract available.https://brill.com/view/journals/mata/mata-overview.xmlhj2020Political Science
Bibliography: pages 232-239.This project constitutes a close textual analysis of The South African C...
This article attempts to assess the short and long-terrn effects of the South African War of 1899-19...
This book showcases new research by emerging and established scholars on white workers and the white...
In ‘The Rise and Fall of Afrikaner Women’ (2003), Gilliomee argues that Afrikaner women’s history ‘...
The revisionist literature of the 1970s approached social stratification in South Africa with the in...
Abstract: From the late 1970s, South Africanist social history of broadly Thompsonian characteristic...
In this article I argue that what enabled affiliation to the larger political project against apar...
In an influential article on the evolution of Afro-American society on the British mainland of North...
The acculturation of the Khoikhoi and the slaves in the Cape Colony (1652-1910) – a historiographica...
From the late 1950s, as independent African polities replaced formal colonial rule in Africa, South ...
In this article it is argued that, since the abuse of anthropology in the colonial and apartheid era...
This article uses historical evidence to track the invention of traditions in particular spheres of ...
Paper presented at the Wits History Workshop: The Making of Class, 9-14 February, 198
Review of S.E. Duff, Changing Childhoods in the Cape Colony: Dutch Reformed Church Evangelicalism an...
No abstract available.https://brill.com/view/journals/mata/mata-overview.xmlhj2020Political Science
Bibliography: pages 232-239.This project constitutes a close textual analysis of The South African C...
This article attempts to assess the short and long-terrn effects of the South African War of 1899-19...
This book showcases new research by emerging and established scholars on white workers and the white...
In ‘The Rise and Fall of Afrikaner Women’ (2003), Gilliomee argues that Afrikaner women’s history ‘...