Waiting : the Whites of South Africa /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Crapanzano, Vincent, 1939-
Edition:1st ed.
Imprint:New York : Random House, c1985.
Description:xxiv, 358 p. ; 25 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/666293
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:0394509862 : $19.95 (est.)
Notes:Includes index.
Bibliography: p. [339]-343.
Review by Choice Review

Crapanzano (Queens College and CUNY Graduate Center) provides a contemporary analysis of the underpinnings of racism in South Africa. Based upon two years of field research in a village near Cape Town, the author deals with the social entrapment of domination as practiced officially and informally by the rural white minority. Replacing other largely impressionistic accounts of the political and social behavior of South African elites, Crapanzano's research assesses in particular the complex realities of domination affecting individual action and perception. Because the rural areas remain strongholds of systematic discrimination, this study is a major contribution to the literature treating the dynamics of change within the South African context. Of equal interest would be the application of Crapanzano's methodology to urban whites, who may be more immediately affected by those dynamics. Strongly recommended for both general and academic readers.-L.C. Duly, Bemidji State University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The white inhabitants of a South African farming village, and one maverick minister in particular, have told social anthropologist Crapanzano some rich human stories, with bearing on Afrikaner identity and English-speaking lack-of-identity, and the animosity between the two groups; but as a purported study of ""the effects of domination on everyday life,"" and especially as regards the relation of whites to nonwhites, the book is unsatisfactory. (Like Crapanzano's earlier studies of nonwhites--American Indian Foster Bennett, Moroccan Tuhami--it has uncongealed elements of symbolist, phenomenological, and psychological analysis.) That these are people who are ""waiting"" is self-evident: it isn't a theme that Crapanzano, interweaving their stories, can do anything with--except insofar as the English are poised to depart. What does stand out is the situation of the Afrikaners: habituated to male despotism, fundamentalist and puritanical, obsessed with their own quasi-Biblical history, aliens in the white European/overseas world. ""Unlike the other Christian churches of South Africa,"" the Dutch Reformed Churches preach and practice apartheid. There is among the Afrikaners an almost mystical attachment to ancestral land. To some, the racist, theocratic Afrikaner Republic is the fulfillment of God's purpose. That said, Crapanzano would not have had a book without the atypical story of Hennie van der Marwe: an Anglican priest of Afrikaner origin, a charismatic with a chiefly Coloured (mixed race) congregation. (It occupies half or more of the book.) Besides probing for signification within his own framework (how did Hennie's family react to his marriage to English Rose? to his conversion?), Crapanzano tries to turn this material inside out: is Hennie telling the truth about his attraction to Rose? about his conversion? (A semi-disaffected son has different ideas. Crapanzano has likes and dislikes among the family.) The result is maladroit, and sometimes distasteful. And where South Africa's blacks are concerned, Crapanzano strikes out: he didn't make contact, and doesn't even maintain consistency--either as regards the Blacks' ""cultural heritage"" (much/little tribalism) or the whites' emotional involvement with, or indifference"" to, them. James North's Freedom Rising (below), which is chiefly about South Africa's nonwhite populations, has its own fallings--but taken together each would help compensate for the shortcomings of the other. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Choice Review


Review by Kirkus Book Review