Tuesday, November 24, 2020
Kaffir Boy - Mark Mathabane
The memoir of a Black man growing up in the township of Soweto outside of Johannesburg in the 1960s. When read in conjunction with Giliomee's Afrikaners it reveals the shortcomings in the latter. For all of Giliomee's protestations that the governance which took place during apartheid had benefits for White and Black South Africans, he does not adequately address the human cost, in terms of the lives of individuals. Mathabane discusses the effects, not on a structural, but personal level, in terms of hunger, depression, anxiety, lack of opportunity and so forth. He does so with wit and thoughtfully.