Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Tables
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- 1 Approaching Kuruman
- 2 Goat People and Fish People on the Agro-Pastoral Frontier, c. 1750–1830
- 3 Intensification and Social Innovation on the Cape Frontier, 1820s–1884
- 4 Colonial Annexation: Land Alienation and Environmental Administration, 1884–1894
- 5 Environmental Trauma, Colonial Rule, and the Failure of Extensive Food Production, 1895–1903
- 6 The Environmental History of a “Labor Reservoir,” 1903–1970s
- 7 Apportioning Water, Dividing Land: Segregation, 1910–1977
- 8 Betterment and the Bophuthatswana Donkey Massacre: The Environmental Rights of Tribal Subjects, 1940s–1983
- 9 Retrospectives on Socio-Environmental History and Socio-Environmental Justice
- Appendix A South African Census Statistics on Human Population
- Appendix B South African Census Statistics on Stock Population
- Appendix C1 1991 Individual Interviews
- Appendix C2 1997–1998 Individual Interviews
- Appendix C3 1991 and 1997–1998 Group Interviews
- Appendix D A Note on Archival Sources
- Notes
- Index
1 - Approaching Kuruman
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Tables
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- 1 Approaching Kuruman
- 2 Goat People and Fish People on the Agro-Pastoral Frontier, c. 1750–1830
- 3 Intensification and Social Innovation on the Cape Frontier, 1820s–1884
- 4 Colonial Annexation: Land Alienation and Environmental Administration, 1884–1894
- 5 Environmental Trauma, Colonial Rule, and the Failure of Extensive Food Production, 1895–1903
- 6 The Environmental History of a “Labor Reservoir,” 1903–1970s
- 7 Apportioning Water, Dividing Land: Segregation, 1910–1977
- 8 Betterment and the Bophuthatswana Donkey Massacre: The Environmental Rights of Tribal Subjects, 1940s–1983
- 9 Retrospectives on Socio-Environmental History and Socio-Environmental Justice
- Appendix A South African Census Statistics on Human Population
- Appendix B South African Census Statistics on Stock Population
- Appendix C1 1991 Individual Interviews
- Appendix C2 1997–1998 Individual Interviews
- Appendix C3 1991 and 1997–1998 Group Interviews
- Appendix D A Note on Archival Sources
- Notes
- Index
Summary
Once, outsiders considered Kuruman in the Kalahari thornveld an interesting place, but today its popular allure is gone. In the early nineteenth century, the area just north of the Orange River (Figure 1-1) was a remote and exotic destination for visitors from the Cape, but its dusty and bleached-out landscape could not long distract explorers from the lush allure of the interior. Thus, it was “left to wither on the vine,” on a “bygone road to Africa.” Once, historians found that this southern Tswana region provided good evidence about a process that interested them – imperial annexation in the nineteenth century – and wrote about the area including Kuruman. Eventually, however, the interests of Africanist historians changed from imperial annexation to colonial struggles and negotiations. While twentieth-century South Africa was a dynamic scene of political contest and cultural innovation, observers have perceived this region as an underpopulated and quiescent backwater. In short, in earlier times some visitors and historians found the place interesting, but few have found anything in its more recent past worth dwelling upon.
This book returns to Kuruman to construct its socio-environmental history. My project has been to comb rich sources about this place for evidence of people interacting with the environment and, through their environmental relations, with each other. By looking at different groups of people and their relations with the nonhuman world around them, I have united the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in one extended narrative and found a historical dynamic behind the quiescence.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Environment, Power, and InjusticeA South African History, pp. 1 - 31Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003