Notes
1 A Survey of Race Relations 1959–1960 (Johannesburg, SAIRR, 1960).
1 See P. Bonner, ‘The Russians on the Reef, 1947–1957: Urbanisation, Gang Warfare and Ethnic Mobilisation’, in P. Bonner et al. (eds), Apartheid's Genesis, 1935–1962 (Johannesburg, Ravan Press, 1993); and D. Coplan, In the Time of the Cannibals: The Word Music of South Africa's Basotho Migrants (Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1994).
2 J. Guy and M. Thabane, ‘The Ma-Rashea: A Participant's Perspective’, in B. Bozzoli (ed.), Class, Community and Conflict (Johannesburg, Ravan Press, 1987).
1 Adams sees Walmart in the United States as the perfection of, rather than a break from, management attempts at deskilling workers. Salzinger's study argues that new surveillance techniques have accompanied a gendered reordering of workplaces, according to which notions of docility, flexibility, and dexterity are valorised as intrinsic to the ‘new worker’. While the idea of the Fordist worker depended on naturalised masculinity, the shifting order of the workplace demands ‘femininity’ from both male and female workers. L. Salzinger, Genders in Production: Making Workers in Mexico's Global Factories (Berkeley, University of California Press, 2003) and T. Adams, ‘Making the New Shop Floor: Walmart, Labor Control and the History of Postwar Discount Retail in America’, in N. Lichtenstein (ed.), Walmart: The Face of Twenty-First Century Capitalism (New York, New Press, 2006).
1 M. McKittrick, To Dwell Secure. Generation, Christianity. and Colonialism in Ovamboland (James Currey, Oxford, 2002), p. 206.
1 A.B. Stahl, Making History in Banda: Anthropological Visions of Africa's Past (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2001).
2 T.N. Huffman, ‘Archaeological Evidence for Climatic Change During the Last 2,000 Years in Southern Africa’, Quaternary International, 33 (1996), pp. 55–60.
1 N. Bhebe and T. Ranger, (eds), Society in Zimbabwe's Liberation War (London and Portsmouth, NJ, Heinemann, 1996), p. 18.