作为蓝地的本土:南非的种族基础设施生产

IF 0.5 3区 社会学 Q3 AREA STUDIES
Zandi Sherman
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要:南非市政当局越来越多地庆祝预付费水表和电表使他们能够建设更具弹性的城市。这种框架因其新自由主义的基础而受到批评,在新自由主义基础上,韧性的话语掩盖了人们被迫在资源不断减少的情况下生存的现实。虽然这些基础设施不可否认地实现了新自由主义逻辑,但本文考虑了19世纪金伯利的劳工大院,表明这些基础设施也具有更古老的种族化功能。金伯利大院由各种技术专家设计和管理,其任务是最大限度地提高生产力,平衡经济限制与死亡率。在这样做的过程中,他们依赖并产生了关于身体的种族主义理论。当专家们将他们的工作定义为对“本土种族”的观察时,事实上,这些专家正在产生他们声称只是为了揭露的种族真相。该大院通常被研究为种族统治的基础设施,很少被认为产生了新出现的“种族”概念。纵观这一谱系,当代南非持续的基础设施胁迫,依赖于早期发展起来的技术种族专业知识,表明自己对种族的持续繁衍至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The native body as blue ground: South Africa’s infrastructural production of race
ABSTRACT South African municipalities increasingly celebrate prepaid water and electricity meters for enabling them to build more resilient cities. This framing has been critiqued for its neoliberal underpinnings, where the discourse of resilience masks the reality that people are being coerced into surviving with consistently diminishing resources. While these infrastructures undeniably materialise neoliberal logics, this paper considers the labour compounds of nineteenth-century Kimberley to suggest such infrastructures also have a racialising function with a much older lineage. The Kimberley compounds were designed and managed by various technical experts tasked with maximising productivity and balancing economic constraints with mortality rates. In so doing, they relied upon and produced racialised theories of the body. Where the experts framed their work as turning on the observation of “the native races,” in fact those experts were producing the very racial truths they claimed only to uncover. The compound, most often studied as an infrastructure of racial domination, has rarely been recognised as productive of emergent notions of “race.” Read through this lineage, continued infrastructural coercion in contemporary South Africa, which relies on the techno-racial expertise developed in earlier eras, reveals itself as critical to race’s continual reproduction.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: Social Dynamics is the journal of the Centre for African Studies at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. It has been published since 1975, and is committed to advancing interdisciplinary academic research, fostering debate and addressing current issues pertaining to the African continent. Articles cover the full range of humanities and social sciences including anthropology, archaeology, economics, education, history, literary and language studies, music, politics, psychology and sociology.
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