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Space, place and identity: political violence in Mpumalanga township, Kwazulu-Natal, 1987-1993

ABSTRACT
This thesis investigates political violence between the United Democratic Front
and Inkatha in Mpumalanga township, Natal. In the early 1980s and early 1990s
Mpumalanga was one of Natal’s townships most gravely affected by political
violence.
I ask and answer four questions:
1. Why and how did the conflict between political organisations in Natal
become violent?
2. What forms did the violence take?
3. Why, as a result of the violence did ordinary people with little prior history
of political activity come to identify with either the UDF or Inkatha?
4. How were these political identities produced?
In order to answer these questions the thesis explores three primary arguments.
The first argument is that 1987 represents a severe rupture in the politics of Natal.
This rupture is captured in the violent form of political conflict that gripped the
province. To understand this rupture the thesis looks back at a complex set of
processes that interlocked over space and time.
A second major argument of the thesis is that an aspect of the distinctiveness of
the violence was its profoundly spatialised form in combination with gendered
and generational forms. There were two major shifts in the spatialised form of the
violence. The first shift occurred when instead of only attacking individuals, the
household and its members also became targets. And then the second shift was
when the purpose of the violence was about the pursuit of territory. Boundaries
between territories identified who was ‘in’ and who was ‘out’ and all aspects of
everyday life became politicised.
The third major argument of the thesis is that there was a strong relationship
between space/place and political identity. The re-territorialisation of space
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during the violence was central to the production of these new identities. Political
violence created new spatialities, with space itself acquiring political meaning and
identity. The political meanings of these spaces were intense markers of their
identity and overrode all other meanings and identities. As the spatial form of the
violence shifted it forced people to question their political identities. The lived
experience of the politicisation of everyday life by the violence shaped the
production of political identities.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/4823
Date15 May 2008
CreatorsBonnin, Deborah Rosemary
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
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