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dc.contributor.authorCouper, Scott Everett
dc.date.accessioned2017-05-09T09:14:47Z
dc.date.available2017-05-09T09:14:47Z
dc.date.issued2016
dc.identifier.citationCouper, S.E. 2016. “Let’s do things on our own …”: Gender and class dynamics during the quest to restore Inanda Seminary’s financial integrity, 1999-2001. New Contree : A journal of Historical and Human Sciences for Southern Africa. 77:100-122, Dec. [http://dspace.nwu.ac.za/handle/10394/4969]en_US
dc.identifier.issn0379-9867
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10394/21794
dc.description.abstractDuring the 1990s, decades of disinvestment caused by Bantu Education prohibited Inanda Seminary from competing equally with other previously advantaged Whites-only private and former public ‘Model C’ schools within South Africa’s new democratic dispensation. In December 1997, after decades of institutional corrosion, the United Congregational Church of Southern Africa decided to close the Seminary. Yet, the Seminary opened in January 1998 under new management composed entirely of middle-class alumnae determined to breathe new life into the school still teetering precariously. This article chronicles three years, 1999 to 2001, thereby documenting the school’s ultimate defeat over and recovery from Bantu Education. Though Inanda Seminary’s middle-class alumnae saved it from closure, its more elite graduates did not initially feature prominently in the school’s financial stabilisation. Rather, men, both serving the church and government (most notably, Nelson Mandela), intervened and provided the crucial financial and infrastructural impetus to salvage the school from the wreck of ecclesiastic decay and establish it as a Section 21 private company. The article explores if and why gender and class dynamics likely played a role in the events leading to the school’s resuscitation. Today, the Seminary is again an extraordinary pioneering school providing quality education to black South African girls.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherSchool for Basic Sciences, Vaal Triangle Campus, North-West Universityen_US
dc.subjectInanda Seminaryen_US
dc.subjectBantu Educationen_US
dc.subjectNelson Mandelaen_US
dc.subjectJacob Zumaen_US
dc.subjectMangosuthu Buthelezien_US
dc.subjectEileen Shanduen_US
dc.subjectObed Mlabaen_US
dc.subjectLinda Zamaen_US
dc.subjectBen Ngubaneen_US
dc.subjectBonganjalo Gobaen_US
dc.subjectSappien_US
dc.subjectJeremiah Wrighten_US
dc.subjectDaniel Hoffmanen_US
dc.subjectGlobal Ministriesen_US
dc.subjectUnited Congregational Church of Southern Africaen_US
dc.subjectJudy Tateen_US
dc.subjectSusan Valiquetteen_US
dc.subjectHixonia Nyasuluen_US
dc.subjectMantombazana Tshabalala-Msimangen_US
dc.subjectBaleka Mbeteen_US
dc.subjectThandeka Mgodusoen_US
dc.subjectRobin Thompsonen_US
dc.subjectBarbara Masakelaen_US
dc.title“Let’s do things on our own …”: Gender and class dynamics during the quest to restore Inanda Seminary’s financial integrity, 1999-2001en_US
dc.typeArticleen_US


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