WORKING PAPER 08/239
Title:
The Rise and Fall of the Weberian Analysis of Class in South Africa between 1949 and the early 1970s
Author(s): Jeremy Seekings
Date of Publication: December 2008
Price: R 5.00
Abstract
The hegemony of Marxist approaches to the study of stratification in South
Africa has obscured the prominence of Weberian contributions between the late
1940s and the early 1970s. Some of these Weberian studies focused on the
nascent black middle class, paying particular attention to the importance of
status. Others, influenced by the literature on the American South, used the
concept of caste as an extreme form of status in analyzing the relationship
between race and class in South Africa. Whilst flawed, these studies did address
directly aspects of South Africans’ everyday lives – and especially interactions –
that the subsequent structural Marxists side-stepped and with which neo-
Marxist social historians struggled. Since the end of apartheid, sociologists –
and novelists – have returned to the study of everyday social relationships and
perceptions of stratification, paying particular attention to status.
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