Mass Movements and the Petty Bourgeoisie: the Social Origins of ICU Leadership, 1924–1929
- 1 April 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of African History
- Vol. 25 (3) , 295-310
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021853700028188
Abstract
Radical historians criticizing leaders of the Industrial and Commercial Workers' Union have focused on their petty bourgeois origins. This article argues that although most organizers of the later 1920s did not derive from the working class, neither were they able to base themselves securely within the petty bourgeoisie. Instead, like lower-middle-class Africans in general, they were being forced ever further from the white bourgeoisie and ever closer to the black masses. This was apparent in all spheres of life – economic, political, cultural, social and ideological – and was also increasingly evident in protest. As racially oppressed men and women subject to proletarianization and engaged in struggle, ICU leaders do not fit neatly into schemas which stress the bourgeois nature of the petty bourgeoisie.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- POLITICAL SHOEMAKERSPast & Present, 1980
- Sol Plaatje, De Beers and an old tram shed: class relations and social control in a South African town, 1918–1919Journal of Southern African Studies, 1978