Reworking citizenship Race, gender, and kinship in South Africa

Brady G'sell

Book - 2024

"In scenes eerily reminiscent of the apartheid era, July 2021 saw South Africa's streets filled with angry crowds burning and looting shops. Some, enraged by the state of the nation, aimed to disrupt "business as usual." Others, many of them women of color, frustrated by their poverty and marginalization, crossed broken glass to collect food for hungry children. As one black woman told a reporter, reflecting on the country's transition from the apartheid era: "We didn't get freedom. We only got democracy." Across the world, anxieties abound that wage labor regimes and state-citizen covenants are eroding. What obligations do states have to support their citizens? What meaning does citizenship itself ho...ld? This book details the broiling discontent around political belonging exposed by these and similar uprisings. Through long-term fieldwork with impoverished black African, Indian, and coloured (mixed race) South African women living in the Point, an urban neighborhood of Durban, South Africa's third largest city, Brady G'Sell highlights how they strive to rework political institutions that effectively exclude them. Blending intimate ethnography with rich historical analysis, her examples reveal the interrelationship between seemingly disconnected domains: citizenship, kinship, and political economy. G'Sell argues that women's kinship-based labor is central to ensuring the survival of modern states and imbues their citizenship with essential content, and through the notion of relational citizenship offers new imaginaries of political belonging"--

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Subjects
Published
Stanford, California : Stanford University Press [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Brady G'sell (Author)
Physical Description
xxi, 288 pages 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781503639171
  • "In point, it is the same as if you are alone" : kinshipping in a kinless space
  • "You are mothers of the nation" : citizenship and social reproduction
  • "She is not conscious of her maternal role" : kinshipping in the welfare office
  • "We are mothers, we are hustlers" : kinshipping in the community
  • "Me and him we only have a child together, nothing more" : kinshipping in the court
  • "We are able to stay together as a family" : kinshipping at home.
Review by Choice Review

Reworking Citizenship examines the establishment of the Republic of South Africa in 1994 and the meaning of citizenship for impoverished women living in the Point, an inner-city neighborhood in Durban. G'sell (Univ. of Iowa) interviewed women regarding their views of becoming free citizens despite their continued need to acquire support from many local people and government agencies. This relational citizenship, referred to as "kinshipping," reflects the idea of kinship used by women living in the Point without kin. Following an introduction, chapter 1 examines kinshipping practices in the Point, while chapter 2 discusses interviews with impoverished women of color who explain their views of motherhood and why South African citizenship has disappointed them. Chapter 3 is based on 1960s case files of three women (one coloured, one white, and one Black) with children. Whether they were allowed to keep their children with them reflected ideas about motherhood, race, and class by the Court, documented in case file materials written by social workers. Chapters 3--6 discuss the contemporary ways that mothers access support from various sources. This excellent book will encourage readers to similarly think about the social and political situations in their own societies. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers, advanced undergraduates through faculty, and professionals. --Elisha P. Renne, emerita, University of Michigan

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.