1st Edition

South Africa's Struggle to Remember Contested Memories of Squatter Resistance in the Western Cape

By Kim Wale Copyright 2016
196 Pages
by Routledge

196 Pages
by Routledge

196 Pages
by Routledge

Transitional justice studies typically focuses on how nations remember, face and deal with histories of past violence. This book, however, shifts the frame from national discourses of transitional justice onto local memory actors who attempt to engage with these broader systems of meaning from below. The case study is based on the memory struggles of individuals and groups who are... Read more

1. Histories of struggle and violence  2. Transitional justice memory frames  3. Unfolding a memory paradox  4. Narratives of struggle and violence  5. Narratives of transition: Disillusionment and dependency  6. Reclaiming people's power in local memory  7. Hegemony and agency in memory narratives

Biography

Kim Wale is a post-doctoral fellow in Trauma, Forgiveness and Reconciliation Studies at the University of the Free State, South Africa. As a Commonwealth Scholar, she completed her PhD in post-conflict development at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, United Kingdom. Dr Wale is co-editor and co-author of the book Class in Soweto (2013, UKZN Press), which was selected as an Outstanding Academic Title by the CHOICE review journal for academic libraries.

"This study ...uti-lises a unique and often stirring collection of voices expressing suffering, confusion and indignation in relation to the past and present to put forward insightful argu-ments about power in transitional societies."

Danielle Van Zyl-Hermann, University of the Free State, African Affairs, April 2017, Vol 4116, Issue 463