Landscapes of division: social movements and the politics of urban and rural space in the Grahamstown region of the Eastern Cape
This thesis investigates the politics of two grassroots social movements, the Unemployed People’s Movement (UPM), based in Grahamstown, and the Rural People’s Movement (RPM), based in the rural areas near Peddie, forty miles east. Observing that urban and rural are political designations, the primar...
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-205722017-09-29T16:01:36ZLandscapes of division: social movements and the politics of urban and rural space in the Grahamstown region of the Eastern CapeO’Halloran, PaddyThis thesis investigates the politics of two grassroots social movements, the Unemployed People’s Movement (UPM), based in Grahamstown, and the Rural People’s Movement (RPM), based in the rural areas near Peddie, forty miles east. Observing that urban and rural are political designations, the primary question of this thesis is: Do the politics of these social movements challenge the conception of urban and rural as discrete political spaces? To some extent, it responds to and complicates Mamdani’s theory of a bifurcated state in post-apartheid South Africa in which urban zones are the site of civil society and rural zones the site of traditional authorities, and only the former a democratised space (1996). Three themes—race, space, and citizenship—are employed and interrogated in the process of answering the principal question. Broadly historical in nature, and understanding the present political context to be a product of historical processes, the thesis begins with an historical study of the Grahamstown region from the time of the town’s founding in 1812 until the end of apartheid in 1994, keeping the three key themes in focus. Then the politics of UPM and RPM are explored through a series of interviews aimed at understanding the context and experience of movement members and seeking their insight into the question of urban and rural space. Their responses are presented as a dialogue employing a theoretical strategy from Aguilar (2014) that distinguishes between and provides a framework to measure the ‘practical scope’ and the ‘interior horizon’ of movements. The thesis concludes with a discussion of important themes arising in the interviews: citizenship, NGOs, and political parties, and, of course, space. The backdrop to this concluding discussion is the xenophobic violence which occurred in Grahamstown in October 2015, helping situate the research and themes within the broader context of South African politics.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Humanities, Political and International Studies2016ThesisMastersMA145 leavespdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10962/3950vital:20572EnglishO’Halloran, Paddy |
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English |
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Others
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This thesis investigates the politics of two grassroots social movements, the Unemployed People’s Movement (UPM), based in Grahamstown, and the Rural People’s Movement (RPM), based in the rural areas near Peddie, forty miles east. Observing that urban and rural are political designations, the primary question of this thesis is: Do the politics of these social movements challenge the conception of urban and rural as discrete political spaces? To some extent, it responds to and complicates Mamdani’s theory of a bifurcated state in post-apartheid South Africa in which urban zones are the site of civil society and rural zones the site of traditional authorities, and only the former a democratised space (1996). Three themes—race, space, and citizenship—are employed and interrogated in the process of answering the principal question. Broadly historical in nature, and understanding the present political context to be a product of historical processes, the thesis begins with an historical study of the Grahamstown region from the time of the town’s founding in 1812 until the end of apartheid in 1994, keeping the three key themes in focus. Then the politics of UPM and RPM are explored through a series of interviews aimed at understanding the context and experience of movement members and seeking their insight into the question of urban and rural space. Their responses are presented as a dialogue employing a theoretical strategy from Aguilar (2014) that distinguishes between and provides a framework to measure the ‘practical scope’ and the ‘interior horizon’ of movements. The thesis concludes with a discussion of important themes arising in the interviews: citizenship, NGOs, and political parties, and, of course, space. The backdrop to this concluding discussion is the xenophobic violence which occurred in Grahamstown in October 2015, helping situate the research and themes within the broader context of South African politics. |
author |
O’Halloran, Paddy |
spellingShingle |
O’Halloran, Paddy Landscapes of division: social movements and the politics of urban and rural space in the Grahamstown region of the Eastern Cape |
author_facet |
O’Halloran, Paddy |
author_sort |
O’Halloran, Paddy |
title |
Landscapes of division: social movements and the politics of urban and rural space in the Grahamstown region of the Eastern Cape |
title_short |
Landscapes of division: social movements and the politics of urban and rural space in the Grahamstown region of the Eastern Cape |
title_full |
Landscapes of division: social movements and the politics of urban and rural space in the Grahamstown region of the Eastern Cape |
title_fullStr |
Landscapes of division: social movements and the politics of urban and rural space in the Grahamstown region of the Eastern Cape |
title_full_unstemmed |
Landscapes of division: social movements and the politics of urban and rural space in the Grahamstown region of the Eastern Cape |
title_sort |
landscapes of division: social movements and the politics of urban and rural space in the grahamstown region of the eastern cape |
publisher |
Rhodes University |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10962/3950 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ohalloranpaddy landscapesofdivisionsocialmovementsandthepoliticsofurbanandruralspaceinthegrahamstownregionoftheeasterncape |
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1718541503598428160 |