Unstable Ground
The Lives, Deaths, and Afterlives of Gold in South Africa
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Columbia University Press
Publishing:4th Mar '25
£28.00
This title is due to be published on 4th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
What has gold done to people? What has it made them do? The Witwatersrand in South Africa, once home to the world’s richest goldfields, is today scattered with abandoned mines into which informal miners known as zama zamas venture in an illicit—often deadly—search for ore. Based on field research conducted across more than twenty-five years around these mines, Unstable Ground reveals the worlds that gold made possible—and gold’s profound costs for those who have lived in its shadow and dreamt of its transformative power.
From the vantage point of the closure of South Africa’s gold mines, Rosalind C. Morris reconsiders their histories, beginning in the present and descending into the pasts that shaped them. Anchored in evocative descriptions of mining in the ruins, this book explores the social worlds built on gold and the lives that were remade and sometimes undone by the industry over a century and a half. Viewing this industry from its margins, against the backdrop of the cyanide revolution, the gold standard’s demise, and recurrent sinkholes, as well as the insurrectionary protests and violence that continue to this day, it recasts the history of South Africa and the incomplete effort to overcome apartheid amid the transformations of the global economy. In writing that is by turns immersive, incisive, and poetic, Morris unearths a history that was born of imperial aspiration and that persists as a speculative mirage. Interweaving ethnography, history, personal testimony, and political thought with striking readings of South African literary texts, Unstable Ground is a work of extraordinary ambition and depth.
Morris offers an ethnography that astutely and illuminatingly captures the stubborn fiction that there is such a thing as a distinction between the formal and informal sectors of the economy, or between the normal and abnormal modes of existence in southern Africa’s political economy. This is all one economy. The haves and the have-nots inhabit one world. Different for sure but one. -- Jacob S. Dlamini, author of The Terrorist Album: Apartheid’s Insurgents, Collaborators, and the Security Police
This is a history of South Africa and the gold mining at its core unlike any you have encountered. Enriched by two and a half decades of field and archival research, this exquisitely crafted book calibrates many registers: poetical and lyrical, geological, legal, philosophical, technical, sociological, and much more. The result is sumptuously layered, each page shimmering with insight and a delight to read. -- Isabel Hofmeyr, author of Dockside Reading: Hydrocolonialism and the Custom House
Brilliant! With writerly flair, Morris presents interviews from the margins and gives them a close reading based on more than twenty years of wide-ranging research, combined with dazzling theoretical analyses. Vivid and compelling, this counter-history is a work of exceptional power and literary richness. -- Antije Krog, author of Pillage and Country of My Skull
Rosalind Morris is a remarkable scholar, deep thinker, and artist. The tragedy of gold mining and its relationship to the emergence and sustenance of Apartheid and its aftermath is a story that needs to be told. In this book, she develops an astonishingly capacious and powerful analysis through the lens of fetishism in order to understand the enduring fantasies of, and feverish desires for, gold as well as racialized politics within South Africa’s race-based capitalism. -- Andrew C. Willford, author of The Future of Bangalore's Cosmopolitan Pasts: Civility and Difference in a Global City
ISBN: 9780231216128
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
640 pages