The Rules of the Game: Struggles in Black Recreation and Social Welfare Policy in South Africa
Cobley presents five interconnected case studies of previously neglected aspects of recreation and social welfare policy in South Africa. He charts their historical development and poses the critical question: In shaping recreation and social welfare policy, by what rules did the protagonists play?

Drawing on current conceptual debates concerning the roles of ordinary people and the nature of the colonial state, Cobley seeks to develop an understanding of the operation of power relations—the rules of the game—in twentieth-century South Africa.

Some considerations on the current challenges facing social historians of South Africa are set out in a short introductory chapter. Cobley then presents five interconnected case studies: the rise of African sport in the towns; the politics of reading and the provision of libraries; the control and training of African women in towns; the role of alcohol in the black community; and the emergence of social work as a profession for blacks in the 1930s and 1940s. Throughout the text he poses the critical question: In shaping recreation and social welfare policy, by what rules did the protagonists play? This work is full of provocative analyses for researchers and scholars dealing with power and the state in colonial societies, particularly in Africa.

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The Rules of the Game: Struggles in Black Recreation and Social Welfare Policy in South Africa
Cobley presents five interconnected case studies of previously neglected aspects of recreation and social welfare policy in South Africa. He charts their historical development and poses the critical question: In shaping recreation and social welfare policy, by what rules did the protagonists play?

Drawing on current conceptual debates concerning the roles of ordinary people and the nature of the colonial state, Cobley seeks to develop an understanding of the operation of power relations—the rules of the game—in twentieth-century South Africa.

Some considerations on the current challenges facing social historians of South Africa are set out in a short introductory chapter. Cobley then presents five interconnected case studies: the rise of African sport in the towns; the politics of reading and the provision of libraries; the control and training of African women in towns; the role of alcohol in the black community; and the emergence of social work as a profession for blacks in the 1930s and 1940s. Throughout the text he poses the critical question: In shaping recreation and social welfare policy, by what rules did the protagonists play? This work is full of provocative analyses for researchers and scholars dealing with power and the state in colonial societies, particularly in Africa.

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The Rules of the Game: Struggles in Black Recreation and Social Welfare Policy in South Africa

The Rules of the Game: Struggles in Black Recreation and Social Welfare Policy in South Africa

by Alan G. Cobley
The Rules of the Game: Struggles in Black Recreation and Social Welfare Policy in South Africa

The Rules of the Game: Struggles in Black Recreation and Social Welfare Policy in South Africa

by Alan G. Cobley

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Overview

Cobley presents five interconnected case studies of previously neglected aspects of recreation and social welfare policy in South Africa. He charts their historical development and poses the critical question: In shaping recreation and social welfare policy, by what rules did the protagonists play?

Drawing on current conceptual debates concerning the roles of ordinary people and the nature of the colonial state, Cobley seeks to develop an understanding of the operation of power relations—the rules of the game—in twentieth-century South Africa.

Some considerations on the current challenges facing social historians of South Africa are set out in a short introductory chapter. Cobley then presents five interconnected case studies: the rise of African sport in the towns; the politics of reading and the provision of libraries; the control and training of African women in towns; the role of alcohol in the black community; and the emergence of social work as a profession for blacks in the 1930s and 1940s. Throughout the text he poses the critical question: In shaping recreation and social welfare policy, by what rules did the protagonists play? This work is full of provocative analyses for researchers and scholars dealing with power and the state in colonial societies, particularly in Africa.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313301087
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 01/30/1997
Series: Contributions in Afro-American and African Studies: Contemporary Black Poets , #182
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.56(d)
Lexile: 1670L (what's this?)

About the Author

ALAN GREGOR COBLEY is Senior Lecturer in History at the University of the West Indies in Barbados. He has published extensively on South Africa, focusing on black social and cultural history in the twentieth century. Among his earlier publications is Class and Consciousness: The Black Petty Bourgeoisie in South Africa, 1924-1950 (Greenwood, 1990).

Table of Contents

Whose Game? Whose Rules?
African Sport and the Struggle for Urban Space
The Politics of Reading: Literacy, Consciousness and the Development of Library Services for Blacks in South Africa
Maids and Mesdames: Contested Objectives in Social Welfare Provision for African Women
"Kill the Weekend": Social Drinking, Drunkenness, and Temperance Among the African Middle Class
"A Proper Attitude of Mind": Socialization, Subordination, and the Rise of the Social Work Profession Among Blacks
Bibliography
Index

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