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Afrikaners, Nationalists, and Apartheid

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

It seems that one of the major fallacies today is that of generalisation. We have all had our fill of the writer or speaker who refers to ‘the African and his animistic religion’, ‘the Zulu and his impi-membership’, or the ‘military syndrome’ in African politics. Every intelligent reader and student is conscious of the danger of generalisation and the tendency to lump under some uniform heading ‘the African’, ‘the Negro’, and ‘the Afrikaner’. While animism, the impi, or military coups may mark or may have marked particular groups of people at a particular time, it is as dangerous to use such generalisations as it is to use the sweeping term ‘the Afrikaner’.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1970

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References

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Page 540 note 1 This should not be confused with the present ruling Party in South Africa, the ‘purified’ National Party, which was set up by Dr Malan in 1934, after Hertzog and Smuts had amalgamated in the United South African National Party (S.A.P.).

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Page 543 note 2 The Star (Johannesburg), 3 November 1959.

Page 544 note 1 Ibid. 7 December 1968.

Page 544 note 2 The Friend, 16 June 1962.

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Page 549 note 2 It is interesting to note that the names of successful United Party candidates included Basson, Bronkhorst, Cillie, Fourie, Malan, Moolman, and Steyn, to mention only a few. One could also point to Erasmus, Swart, or van Wyk Smith among the Progressive Party candidates.