These Potatoes Look Like Humans

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A01=Mbuso Nkosi
Apartheid
Author_Mbuso Nkosi
Bethal
Black African ontology
Black ontology
Category=NHH
critical race
Dispossession
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eschatology
Labour
Land Question
Law
Meaning of Land
ontological homelessness
ontological nowhereness
philosophy of racial consciousness
Post-apartheid
Postmodern blackness
potato boycott
South Africa
spirit of place.
spiritual meaning of land
spiritual violence
Struggle for Land
Violence
White anxiety

Product details

  • ISBN 9781776148417
  • Weight: 417g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Wits University Press
  • Publication City/Country: ZA
  • Product Form: Hardback
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These Potatoes Look Like Humans offers a unique understanding of the intersection between land, labour, dispossession and violence experienced by Black South Africans from the apartheid period to the present. In this ground-breaking book, Mbuso Nkosi criticises the historical framing of this debate within narrow materialist and legalistic arguments. His assertion is that, for most Black South Africans, the meaning of land cannot be separated from one's spiritual and ancestral connection to it, and this results in him seeing the dispossession of land in South Africa with a perspective not yet explored.
Nkosi takes as his starting point the historic 1959 potato boycott in South Africa, which came about as a result of startling rumours that potatoes dug out of the soil from the farms in the Bethal district of Mpumalanga were in fact human heads. Journalists such as Ruth First and Henry Nxumalo went to Bethal to uncover these stories and revealed horrific accounts of abuse and routine killings of farmworkers by white Afrikaners. The workers were disenfranchised Black people who were forced to work on these farms for alleged 'crimes' against National Party state laws, such as the failure to carry passbooks.
In reading this violence from the perspectives of both the Black worker and the white farmer, Nkosi deploys the device of the eye to look at his research subjects and make sense of how the past informs the present. His argument is that the violence against Black farmworkers was not only on the exploitation of cheap labour, but also an anxiety white farmers felt about their settler-colonial appropriation of land. This anxiety, Nkosi argues, is pervasive in current heated public debates on the land question and calls for 'land expropriation without compensation'. Furthermore, the dispossession of Black people from their land cannot be overcome until there is a recognition of the dead and restless spirits of the land, and a spiritual return to home for Black people's ancestors. Until such time, the cycles of violence will persist.
This book will be of interest to academics and scholars working in the area of land and workers' struggles but also to the general reader who wants to gain a deeper understanding of redress and social justice on multiple levels.

uMbuso weNkosi is a lecturer in the Sociology Department at the University of Pretoria.

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