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Biltong Hunting As a Performance of Belonging in Post-Apartheid South Africa
- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2015
Summary
Since the early 1990s, the seventeen-fold growth in South African sport hunting has made the South African wildlife ranching industry the sixth largest contributor to South Africa’s agricultural sector, bringing in $680 million per annum. Biltong Hunting as a Performance of Belonging in Post-Apartheid South Africa links biltong hunting’s rapid growth to the 1990s disassembly of the apartheid state and analyzes how the hierarchy, and belonging that biltong hunters associate with it, emerges anew in the post-apartheid context. It examines the narrative and embodied strategies employed by hunters and farmers to create a space that naturalizes the mythic Afrikaner nationalist past in the post-apartheid present.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2015
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-7391-8858-3
- ISBN-Online
- 978-0-7391-8859-0
- Publisher
- Lexington, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 187
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
ChapterPages
- Contents No access
- Introduction No access
- Chapter One: The Biltong Hunting Landscape No access Pages 1 - 26
- Chapter Two: The Spectre’s Space: Imperialism, Nationalism and the Spatiality of Capitalist Nature No access Pages 27 - 60
- Chapter Three: Violent Desire and Intimate Invisibility No access Pages 61 - 80
- Chapter Four: Unleveling the Playing Field; Unbalancing the Reciprocity No access Pages 81 - 108
- Chapter Five: At Play in the Veld of Belonging No access Pages 109 - 134
- Chapter Six: Escaping Modernity by Telling to Tell No access Pages 135 - 154
- Chapter Seven: Resistance and the Art of Domination No access Pages 155 - 174
- Conclusion No access Pages 175 - 176
- Reference List No access Pages 177 - 182
- Index No access Pages 183 - 186
- About the Author No access Pages 187 - 187




