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HSRC Press :: History :: The Theatre of Violence: Narratives of protagonists in the South African conflict

The Theatre of Violence: Narratives of protagonists in the South African conflict
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The Theatre of Violence: Narratives of protagonists in the South African conflict

Don Foster, Paul Haupt , Marésa de Beer

 
Format240mm x 168mm
Pages376
ISBN 100-7969-2095-8
ISBN 13978-07969-2095-9
Publish Year2005
 
Price:R 220.00
including VAT (14%)
 
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Description
This profound and deeply compassionate study aims to reach into the complexities of political violence in South Africa between 1960 and 1994, and to expand our understanding of the patterns of conflict that almost drew South Africans into a vortex of total disintegration during the apartheid era.

While many accounts have focused on the victims of state repression, this unique volume documents the often contradictory and confusing stories of those who acknowledge having committed some dreadful deeds. Individuals on various sides of the apartheid divide, from state security structures to the ANC, PAC and grassroots, activists, tell their own stories. The central focus is to give an account of the actions of the perpetrators, here depicted as competing protagonists in an arena of violence. It examines the violence forensically, through its public and popular representations, academically and, finally, through the narrative approach, drawing on a rich analysis of stories from different sides.

The authors also offer the first critical examination of the TRC's amnesty process, show how media representations of perpetrators inform public perceptions, and scrutinise international scholarly writings on the issue of political violence. Suggestive and intriguing, The Theatre of Violence opens a fresh examination of the erstwhile taken-for-granted understandings and attempts to address a range of questions that are often not considered, and perhaps cannot be considered, in a dispassionate way. It is in many ways an optimistic study, holding out the possibility of a society that can understand and take steps to minimise the perpetration of gross violations of human rights.
Contents
Foreword
Preface

1. After the Truth and Reconciliation Commission

2. Popular representations of perpetrators

3. Wider academic understandings

4. Morals and methods

5. Police narratives
Law and order: The story of a former Commissioner of Police
Living with death: The story of a former Koevoet operative 

6. Intelligence narratives
'Things weren't as simple': The story of a former general in Military Intelligence
'I never fitted': The story of a National Intelligence Services agent

7. Liberation movement narratives
'A very lonely road': The story of a former MK Commander
'A hungry man is an angry man': The story of a former APLA Head of Operations
'I was never wrong': The story of a former APLA Commander

8. Narratives of township conflicts
'What was the gain of killing people?' The story of a former member of a Self-Protection Unit
'No rewards': The story of a former member of a Self-Defence Unit
Former enemies forging peace

9. Analysis and reflection

10. Conclusion

Acronyms and abbreviations
References
Index
About the Author/s
Don Foster is Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Cape Town. He is the author of books on detention and torture and social psychology, in addition to roughly one hundred scholarly articles on topics such as racism, collective violence and identity politics. He was a member of the Goldstone Commission of Inquiry into collective violence and assisted the Truth & Reconciliation Commission in understanding perpetrators' actions.

Paul Haupt is a UCT-qualified clinical psychologist and was, until recently, the Director of Perpetrator Studies at the Institute of Justice and Reconciliation in Cape Town.

Marésa de Beer holds degrees, including two Masters' qualifications, from the Universities of Stellenbosch, Rhodes and Cape Town. She is a UCT-trained clinical psychologist and is in private practice.
Reviews

Extract of review by Ingrid Palmary (University of the Witwatersrand) in Psychology in Society 2006 (33) pp. 54-56:

"The theatre of violence offers a novel and insightful intervention into how we understand violence in the post apartheid era. It is novel because it deals with the largely neglected perspectives of perpetrators of violence, and insightful because it manages to balance the politics of such an attempt with a need for critical theoretical analysis. In researching (from a loosely narrative and discursive approach) protagonists in the apartheid violence, this book breaks new ground in carefully analysed ways that refuses simple answers."

Extract from review by John D. Brewer (University of Aberdeen) in Ethical and Racial Studies, Volume 29 Number 4 (July 2006):

"The book’s premise is excellent. It explores some of the additional truth recovery procedures that are needed to complete the purpose of the TRC

Gerald Shaw, Cape Times Review, 31 May 2005:

"This is one of the most intriguing and thought-provoking books to be published in the wake of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission...The narratives of those who were directly involved in violence, as in the case of the Koevoet policeman, or those who were responsible for ordering subordinates to undertake attacks on civilians and suchlike, make chilling reading... There are lessons here for post-apartheid South Africa."

in order to better achieve reconciliation. To do this it focuses on narratives from people wrapped up in the conflict. In fact, this is something Northern Ireland could teach the South Africans, for the absence of a formal truth and reconciliation process in the North of Ireland provoked many local forms of truth recovery, some of which consisted of collating the stories from ordinary people in order to give voices to the powerless and neglected. What distinguishes this book is its attention to the narratives of protagonists - the authors dislike the term perpetrators - responsible for the violence. It was the concern for victims that dominated storytelling in Northern Ireland; in this book it is for those responsible for the violations. ... The narratives are fascinating, rich and wonderfully emblematic of South Africa’s violence, and these voices should be allowed to speak for themselves."

Click on the links below to read the reviews:

New Agenda: South African Journal of Social and Economic Policy, Issue 20, Fourth Quarter 2005

Cape Times 20 June 2005

Cape Times 31 May 2005

UCT Electronic Monday Paper 30 May 2005

 
 
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