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Journal article

The Springbok and the Skunk

English
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AUC Library
Taylor & Francis
Africa | Southern Africa

This article draws on oral and written sources to explore the wartime and post-war experiences of white South African men who volunteered to serve in the Second World War. By examining the meaning of war service for these men, I argue that their history offers a critical perspective of the production of popular whiteness in mid-twentieth-century South Africa. The act of volunteering created a sense of entitlement among these men and, for them, the Allied war objective of ‘social justice’ converged around their hopes for ‘homes fit for heroes’ – an ideal loaded with a range of assumptions about race, class and gender. During the war, the Springbok Legion, a type of ‘trade union of the ranks’, attracted a substantial membership of white male soldiers although, by the end of the war, most were alienated by its increasingly radical politics. After the war, there was widespread disappointment and ‘restlessness’ among volunteers, which helped to consolidate their identity as ‘comrades’....

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