<p><strong>Found in this section:</strong></p> <p>1. Brief Table of Contents</p> <p>2. Full Table of Contents</p> <p><strong> <br> </strong></p> <p><strong>1. BRIEF TABLE OF CONTENTS</strong></p> <p><strong>Preface</strong><br><strong>List of Maps</strong><br><strong>List of Photographs and Sources.</strong> <br>Chapter 1 The Setting: Climate, Geography and People in South Africa</p> <p>Chapter 2 Early Conflict and Interdependence: The Establishment and Expansion of the Cape Colony<br>Chapter 3 The British and the Expanding Cape<br>Chapter 4 The Making of New States<br>Chapter 5 African And Afrikaners States in Conflict<br>Chapter 6 The First Phase of Industrialization<br>Chapter 7 The Second Phase of Industrialization: Gold Mining and the Creation of a Unified White State<br>Chapter 8 From Union to Apartheid: The Consolidation of a White State and the Rise of African Opposition, 1910—1948<br>Chapter 9 Apartheid and South African Society<br>Chapter 10 The African Transformation of South Africa<br>Chapter 11 The New South Africa: 1994—2004</p> <p>Chapter 12 Conclusion: Post-Transition Growing Pains and the World</p> <p><strong>Bibliography and Recommended Online Resources</strong><br><strong>Index</strong></p> <p><strong> <br> </strong></p> <p><strong>2. FULL TABLE OF CONTENTS</strong></p> <p><strong>Preface</strong><br><strong>List of Maps</strong><br><strong>List of Photographs and Sources.</strong> <br><strong>Chapter 1: The Setting: Climate, Geography and People in South Africa</strong></p> <p>The Environment</p> <p>Human Communities: The San and Khoe</p> <p>The First Farmers</p> <p>Farming Society</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Questions to Consider</p> <p>For Further Reading</p> <p><strong>Chapter 2: Early Conflict and Interdependence: The Establishment and Expansion of the Cape Colony</strong></p> <p>Earliest Contact: Portuguese Forays and Khoe Responses</p> <p>The V.O.C. (Dutch East India Company) and Company Rule</p> <p>White Settlement and Khoe Resistance</p> <p>Slavery at the Cape</p> <p>Relations in the Zones of Interaction</p> <p>Whites and Griqua in the Interior</p> <p>The Xhosa and White Settlers</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Questions to Consider</p> <p>For Further Reading</p> <p><strong>Chapter 3: The British and the Expanding Cape</strong></p> <p>The Arrival of the British</p> <p>Abolition</p> <p>Reform and Labor</p> <p>British Settlers</p> <p>The Missionary Enterprise</p> <p>Xhosa Crises: Interaction with the Settlers and Civil War</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Questions to Consider</p> <p>For Further Reading</p> <p><strong>Chapter 4</strong>: <strong>The Making of New States</strong></p> <p>The Implications of the making of the “Mefcane”</p> <p>Nguni-speaking Chiefdoms</p> <p>The Rise of the Zulu Kingdom</p> <p>Developments in the Interior</p> <p>Mass Movements and New States</p> <p>Moshoeshoe and the Sotho</p> <p>Mzilikazi and the Ndebele</p> <p>Matiwane's Ngwane and the British</p> <p>British Policy and the Xhosa</p> <p>The Afrikaner “Great Trek”</p> <p>Piet Retief and the Zulu</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Questions to Consider</p> <p>For Further Reading</p> <p><strong>Chapter 5: African And Afrikaners States in Conflict</strong></p> <p>African States and the Trekker Republics</p> <p>Africans and British Policy Initiatives: Segregation and Indirect Rule</p> <p>African States, White Settlers</p> <p>Imperial Authorities and the Xhosa Crisis</p> <p>The Sotho, Afrikaners and British Intervention on the Highveld</p> <p>British Policy Reversals and the Sotho-Orange Free State War</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Questions to Consider</p> <p>For Further Reading</p> <p><strong>Chapter 6: The First Phase of Industrialization</strong></p> <p>Diamond Discoveries and Rival Claims</p> <p>African Men and Women and the Development of Diamond Mining</p> <p>The Impact of Mining</p> <p>Imperial Designs, Local Politics and Confederation Schemes</p> <p>British Imperialism</p> <p>Afrikaner Republican Resistance and the Pedi Kingdom</p> <p>The Final Phases of Conquest</p> <p>Sotho and Zulu Resistance</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Questions to Consider</p> <p>For Further Reading</p> <p><strong>Chapter 7: The Second Phase of Industrialization: Gold Mining and the Creation of a Unified White State</strong></p> <p>Gold Mining African Migrant Labor</p> <p>African Society and Migrant Labor</p> <p>The Politics of Mining: the Afrikaners, and British and Rhodes</p> <p>The South African War. Peace, Reconstruction and the Building of a White State</p> <p>African Resistance and African Labor</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Questions to Consider</p> <p>For Further Reading</p> <p><strong>Chapter 8: From Union to Apartheid: The Consolidation of a White State and the Rise of African Opposition, 1910—1948</strong></p> <p>White Politics and the State</p> <p>Segregation Legislation and African Communities</p> <p>Opposition Movements and the Roots of African Nationalism</p> <p>Rural African Opposition</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Questions to Consider</p> <p>For Further Reading</p> <p><strong>Chapter 9: Apartheid and South African Society</strong></p> <p>The Nationalists and Apartheid</p> <p>Blacks and Apartheid Policies</p> <p>African Society and the Impact of Apartheid</p> <p>The Homelands</p> <p>Opposition Politics: Strategy and Rural Protests</p> <p>Rising Tensions, State Repression and Radicalism</p> <p>South Africa in Global Context</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Questions to Consider</p> <p>For Further Reading</p> <p><strong>Chapter 10: The African Transformation of South Africa</strong></p> <p>The South African Security State and Regional Politics</p> <p>Resistance From Below and the Failure of “Reform”</p> <p>The Rejection of Reform, Uprisings and Opposition Tensions</p> <p>Mounting Pressures and the Road to Negotiations</p> <p>Negotiations and the Road to Democratic Elections</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Questions to Consider</p> <p>For Further Reading</p> <p><strong>Chapter 11: The New South Africa: 1994—2004</strong></p> <p>The New Government and the Ascendancy of the ANC</p> <p>The Economy</p> <p>Looking Back, Healing and Moving Forward: the TRC and the Land Question</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Questions to Consider</p> <p>For Further Reading</p> <p><strong>Chapter 12 Conclusion: Post-Transition Growing Pains and the World</strong></p> <p>This NEW chapter will cover the post-transition leadership of Mbeki and Zuma, the 2010 World Cup, current challenges: HIV/AIDS and crime and the new political economy.</p> <p><strong>Bibliography and Recommended Online Resources</strong><br><strong>Index</strong></p>