The Rise of the Compound-Hostel-Location Assemblage as Infrastructure of South African Colonial Power: The Case of Walvis Bay 1915-1960
The Rise of the Compound-Hostel-Location Assemblage as Infrastructure of South African Colonial Power: The Case of Walvis Bay 1915-1960
The 'infrastructural turn' in social science conceives of infrastructure as having a political life; it is deployed to confer and maintain political authority, but it is also generative of 'the political'. This article articulates this basic premise with the contention that space and circulation are integral to apparatuses of power, specifically in terms of orchestrating and stabilising what Foucault termed 'the right disposition of men and things, arranged so as to lead to a convenient end'.View all notes Based on archival study in Namibia and South Africa, the article examines the changing spatial disposition of African 'men and things' at Walvis Bay between 1915 and 1960, and how these articulated with the changing 'convenient ends' of African urban administration in Namibia. It demonstrates how problematisations in the activity of governing urban Africans during this period provoked the contested rise of key colonial urban political infrastructure - the compound-hostel-location assemblage. Research has shown how South Africa's Department of Native Affairs (DNA), particularly in its focus on urban housing, was central to the state's project of 'internal colonialism'.
CITATION: Byerley, Andrew. The Rise of the Compound-Hostel-Location Assemblage as Infrastructure of South African Colonial Power: The Case of Walvis Bay 1915-1960 . : Taylor & Francis Group , 2015. Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 41, No. 3, June 2015, pp. 519-539 - Available at: https://library.au.int/rise-compound-hostel-location-assemblage-infrastructure-south-african-colonial-power-case-walvis-bay