Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface and Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Note on Terminology
Prologue
Introduction
Part 1: Violence, Allegiance, and Authority in the Making of Kingdoms and Colony
Chapter 1. Chief by the People: Nomsimekwana Mdluli, Security, and Authority in the Time before Tribes
Chapter 2. He Said He Wants to Be Registered as a Chief: Hereditary Chiefs and Government Tribes, 1843–1905
Part 2: The Violence of Young Men, Forced Removals, and Betterment
Chapter 3. Ngangezwe Claims to Be a Hereditary Chief: Organizing Authority by Wards and War, 1905–1930
Chapter 4. They Refuse to Go to Other Chiefs’ Areas: The Nagle Dam and Forced Removals, 1930–1950
Chapter 5. He Said He Wanted the Tribe to Decide: Boundaries and Betterment, 1948–1971
Chapter 6. Only the Fourth Chief: Ethnic Politics and Land Jurisdiction, 1971–1988
Part 3: Civil War in South Africa
Chapter 7. Because My People Are in the MDM, I Have to Be with Them: Ethnic and African Nationalist Politics during Civil War, 1983–1990
Chapter 8. They Were Worried about the Way Our Chief Was Managing His Nation: Land, Authority, and Belonging, 1990–1996
Conclusion
Notes
Glossary (isiZulu–English)
Bibliography
Index