Description
Book SynopsisThe Marikana Massacre of August 16, 2012, was the single most lethal use of force by South African security forces against civilians since the end of apartheid. Those killed were mineworkers in support of a pay raise.
Trade Review“Part investigative report, part oral history, part polemical pamphlet,
Marikana illustrates what can be achieved when academics work closely with activists.” * Los Angeles Review of Books *
“Written by both academics and political activists, the book captured my interest from the first page…The raw data provided by the book makes it not only recommendable for labor scholars and African studies, but also a thrilling read for social movement activists.
Marikana leaves room for more inquiries, which should contribute to conceptual debates.” * African Studies Quarterly *
“Reading this accessibly written title is essential to anyone wishing to understand what happened in the South African platinum belt in the winter of 2012…. A monumental work, of which the first and not least merit is to have demonstrated with journalistic timeliness how much the sociological gaze—an embedded sociology here—may even shortly after the event bring so much to our understanding of it.” * Politique africaine *
“Last year, in South Africa, miners were preyed upon and hunted like dogs for merely questioning the bad treatment that they received…. I read and wept. Why didn’t I know about this? Why didn’t you know more about this?” * Examiner.com *
“A moment in South African history that…may come to be seen as having been as significant as ‘Sharpeville’ and ‘Soweto.’… Well written, extremely scrupulous in its research and forceful in its argument.”
“No amount of capitalist brutality will deter our cause for a living wage. Workers should read this book about the struggles at Marikana.” * Joseph Mathunjwa, president of the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union, South Africa *
“The book is an attempt to provide a bottom-up account of the Marikana story, to correct an imbalance in many official and media accounts that privilege the viewpoints of governments and business, at the expense of workers.” * Jane Duncan, Highway Chair of the Media and Information Society, Rhodes University, South Africa *