Documenting youth participation in the South African anti-apartheid struggle, Youth and Identity Politics in South Africa examines identity construction and negotiation in the region of KwaZulu/Natal. Based on extensive interviews, Sibusisiwe Nombuso Dlamini presents life stories of survival and identity negotiation in a region and at a time where to be youthful and politically active was to be associated with membership in Nelson Mandela's African National Congress ? a potentially dangerous association.
Zulus are far from being an homogenous group. Dlamini examines the dynamics both of group identification ? that of being a young Zulu ? and of the differences, both class and regional. Further, she looks at the discourses of participation in the liberation struggle, and how these discourses intersect with KwaZulu/Natal identity and party politics. Youth and Identity Politics in South Africa shows how the youth identify variously as fans of jazz or hip-hop who espouse a none-racial national character, as athletes who feel a strong connection to traditional Zulu patriarchy, or in many other social and political subcultures. This is a rich and unprecedented youth-centred ethnography that paints a unique picture of the lives of South African youth.
ISBN: | 9780802039118 |
Publication date: | 28th February 2005 |
Author: | S Nombuso Dlamini |
Publisher: | University of Toronto Press |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 231 pages |
Series: | Anthropological Horizons |
Genres: |
Social and cultural anthropology |