1st Edition

Marginal Situation Ils 112

By H.F. Dickie-Clark Copyright 1966
    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1998. This is Volume XI of the twenty-one in the Race, Class and Social Structure series, which looks at the theory of the 'marginal man', the situation and using a 'marginalised' group for study in Durban, South Africa. This expands to include politics, the participation in organised associations and also the links between the marginal situation and psychological marginality.

    Introduction; Part 1 Theoretical and Descriptive; Chapter 1 The Theory of the Marginal Man and Its Critics; Chapter 2 The Concept of the Marginal Situation; Chapter 3 The Historical Development of the Situation of the Durban Coloureds; Chapter 4 The Durban Coloureds and Their Marginal Situation; Part 2 Empirical Analysis of the Concomitants of the Marginal Situation; Chapter 5 Politics; Chapter 6 Part icipation in Organized Associations; Chapter 7 Inter-Stratum Relations; Chapter 8 The Coloured Stratum from Within and Some Responses to Membership of IT; Part 3 Analysis of the Links Between the Marginal Situation and Psychological Marginality; Chapter 9 Psychological Marginality and the Marginal Situation; Chapter 10 Summary of Conclusions in Respect of the Marginal Situation and of its Links with Psychological Marginality;

    Biography

    H. F. Dickie-Clark