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Die vestiging van Skanskopeiland-besproeiingnedersetting as 'n mylpaal in selfwerksame armoedeverligting

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Visser, Karen
Du Pisani, Jacobus Adriaan

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Historical Association of South Africa

Abstract

The Ossewa-Brandwag (OB) was a mass-movement opposed to South Africa's participation in the Second World War on the side of Britain. Thousands of Afrikaners saw the OB as a movement in which they could express their opposition to the war and continue the volk's struggle against British authority. They referred to the OB as the Afrikaner's "Second Rebellion". Afrikaner women also joined the OB in their thousands and participated in all the activities of the movement - including the active resistance to the war effort. In spite of this there is no study that describes the role of women in this regard. This article explores the different forms of resistance women used to articulate their opposition to the war as part of the more activist nature of the OB. The influence of the metaphoric possibilities of the so called volksmoeder construction also comes under the looking glass. Of all the qualities of the volksmoederespecially the idea of women's "sense of independence" is evident in women's resistance OB-women acted within the confines of the volksmoederdiscourse and gave meaning to their constructed identity through their activities of resistance. By doing so they often transgressed and reconstructed pre-war gender norms.

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Du Pisani, J.A. & Visser, K. 2012. Die vestiging van Skanskopeiland-besproeiingnedersetting as 'n mylpaal in selfwerksame armoedeverligting. Historia, 57(1):103-126. [http://reference.sabinet.co.za/sa_epublication/hist]

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