What Racists Believe

What Racists Believe
Author: Gerhard Schutte
Publisher: SAGE Publications, Incorporated
Total Pages: 410
Release: 1995
Genre: Social Science
ISBN:

He explains how and why people believe in racial inequality and how they transmit such beliefs to others. The ideology of white solidarity, its perpetuation, and its breakdown is also analyzed. In the author's analysis, he separates different strands of racism: rural from urban, and moderate from militant. A final chapter compares the racial attitudes of South Africa to those in the United States.

South African Social Attitudes

South African Social Attitudes
Author: Udesh Pillay
Publisher: HSRC Press
Total Pages: 412
Release: 2006
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780796921178

A country’s attitudinal profile is as much a part of its social reality as are its demographic make-up, its culture and its distinctive social patterns. It helps to provide a nuanced picture of a country’s circumstances, its continuities and changes, its democratic health, and how it feels to live there. It also helps to measure the country's progress towards the achievement of its economic, social and political goals, based on the measurement of both 'objective' and 'subjective' realities. South African Social Attitudes: Changing Times, Diverse Voices is a new series aimed at providing an analysis of attitudes and values towards a wide range of social and political issues relevant to life in contemporary South African society. As the series develops, we hope that readers will be able to draw meaningful comparisons with the findings of previous years and thus develop a richer picture and deeper appreciation of changing South African social values. This, the first volume in the series, presents the public's responses during extensive nation-wide interviews conducted by the HSRC in late 2003. The findings are analysed in three thematic sections: the first provides an in-depth examination of race, class and politics; the second gives a critical assessment of the public's perceptions of poverty, inequality and service delivery, and the last explores societal values such as partner violence and moral attitudes. South African Social Attitudes is essential reading for anyone seeking a guide to contemporary social or political issues and debates. It should prove an indispensable tool not only for government policy-makers, social scientists and students, but also for general readers wishing to gain a better understanding of their fellow citizens and themselves.

South Africa's Racial Past

South Africa's Racial Past
Author: Paul Maylam
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2001
Genre: History
ISBN:

A unique overview of the history of South Africa's racial order, from the mid-17th century to the apartheid era. The book highlights the main phases and turning points in this racial order and explores the forces and factors that brought about discriminatory policies, practices, structures, laws and attitudes. It also draws out the political and ideological agendas behind the attempts of various writers to explain the racial order.

Slave Emancipation and Racial Attitudes in Nineteenth-century South Africa

Slave Emancipation and Racial Attitudes in Nineteenth-century South Africa
Author: Richard Lyness Watson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 318
Release: 2012
Genre: Race discrimination
ISBN: 9781107231641

"This book examines the social transformation wrought by the abolition of slavery in 1834 in South Africa's Cape Colony. It pays particular attention to the effects of socioeconomic and cultural changes in the way both freed slaves and dominant whites adjusted to the new world. It compares South Africa's relatively peaceful transition from a slave to a non-slave society to the bloody experience of the US South after abolition, analyzing rape hysteria in both places as well as the significance of changing concepts of honor in the Cape. Finally, the book examines the early development of South Africa's particular brand of racism, arguing that abolition, not slavery itself, was a causative factor; although racist attitudes were largely absent while slavery persisted, they grew incrementally but steadily after abolition, driven primarily by whites' need for secure, exploitable labor"--