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Johannesburg, 1917 to 1930 : a preliminary study of the protest and conditions of the African people

Bibliography: pages 143-149.

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Main Author: Soudien, Crain
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Political Studies 2016
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author Soudien, Crain
author_browse Soudien, Crain
author_facet Soudien, Crain
author_sort Soudien, Crain
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description Bibliography: pages 143-149.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
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publisher Department of Political Studies
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/17766 Johannesburg, 1917 to 1930 : a preliminary study of the protest and conditions of the African people Soudien, Crain Blacks - South Africa - Johannesburg Bibliography: pages 143-149. A struggle for control of the means of production and surplus is constantly played out between those who 'legally' possess the instruments of production - the bourgeoisie, and those who operate, but are alienated from, the means of production - the working class. This struggle manifests itself in countless ways and never retains the same form: the bourgeoisie always seeks fresh methods to keep the proletariat beneath its yoke, while the proletariat itself always forges new ways of counteracting the bourgeoisie's exploitative measures. It is the contention of this work that from 1917 to 1920 a phase of heightened class struggle occurred in South Africa between the African working class and the bourgeoisie in the form of its representatives in both government and the employing class. As we shall see in the chapters which follow, labour spontaneously confronted capital; it made certain demands on the capitalist system and the stage seemed set for a long and traumatic battle between the controllers and the operators of capital. Yet, as suddenly as it began, the popular militancy of the 1917 to 1920 period evaporated; in its stead came a period of dominance by petty bourgeois organisations accompanied by a decline of working class protest. This dramatic change in the quality of working class resistance merits discussion, and to this end a number of questions can he raised: (1) What gave rise to the growth of militancy during and after the First World War? (ii) What happened to this militancy after the War, and what caused it to go into decline? (iii) If militant class confrontation disappeared, what form did the conflict then take, and what new relations between the differing classes came about? 2016-03-14T11:45:00Z 2016-03-14T11:45:00Z 1979 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17766 eng application/pdf Department of Political Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Blacks - South Africa - Johannesburg
Soudien, Crain
Johannesburg, 1917 to 1930 : a preliminary study of the protest and conditions of the African people
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Johannesburg, 1917 to 1930 : a preliminary study of the protest and conditions of the African people
title_full Johannesburg, 1917 to 1930 : a preliminary study of the protest and conditions of the African people
title_fullStr Johannesburg, 1917 to 1930 : a preliminary study of the protest and conditions of the African people
title_full_unstemmed Johannesburg, 1917 to 1930 : a preliminary study of the protest and conditions of the African people
title_short Johannesburg, 1917 to 1930 : a preliminary study of the protest and conditions of the African people
title_sort johannesburg 1917 to 1930 a preliminary study of the protest and conditions of the african people
topic Blacks - South Africa - Johannesburg
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17766
work_keys_str_mv AT soudiencrain johannesburg1917to1930apreliminarystudyoftheprotestandconditionsoftheafricanpeople