Previous literature on South Africa's township uprisings has overlooked girls and young women's involvement in activism and political violence. Through oral history interviews with former male and female comrades, this article presents new evidence of girls' involvement in student politics and collective action in Soweto. Seeking to participate alongside male comrades rather than separately from them, these young women erased their femininity and adopted many of the characteristics of struggle masculinity in their dress, behaviour and use of violence. However, the gendered hierarchies of township life shaped the nature of female comrades' involvement in protest and violence, as their adolescent experiences of sexual violence and subordination remained salient in determining why and how they engaged in the liberation struggle. While female comrades participated in many of the same forms of protest and violence as male comrades, they speak most nostalgically and in most detail about...
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