South Africa's common society
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Date
1991-02
Authors
Simons, Jack
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Abstract
I circulated a draft paper in February 1989 with the title "South Africa's Civil War: Revolution and Counter-Revolution". It had two parts, one called "Resistance and Repression", the other "South Africa's Common Society". Together they made out a case for identifying the struggle as a civil war arising out of a revolutionary situation.
The terms are complementary, not contradictory. A civil war by
definition is an armed conflict between combatants who are
citizens of the same state, belong to the same society, and take
up arms in a struggle for political power. The most bitter and ruinous war of the last century was the civil war fought in the United States in 1861/2 between the slave-owning Confederacy and the Union of free labour states. (2)
A South African example of an imperial war was Britain's war of
1899-1902 against the Boer republics, fought by an aggressive
power to establish control over the whole of Southern Africa in
keeping with the ambition of Cecil John Rhodes (1852-1902) to
paint the map red from Cape to Cairo.
Description
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented February 1991
Keywords
South Africa. Politics and government