Brothers in Arms: The Role of Broederbond Rectors in the Exercise of Hegemony at the University of Fort Hare, 1960–1981

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/0256-8845/4372

Keywords:

Hegemony, apartheid state, secret society, Broederbond, University of Fort Hare

Abstract

As members of the secret Afrikaner organisation, the Broederbond, two of the apartheid-era rectors at the University of Fort Hare were responsible for leading an institution that was supposed to spearhead the modernisation of ethnically defined homelands and their transition to independent states, whilst disseminating apartheid values among the black students. Based on unsorted and unarchived documents located in the personal files of the apartheid-era rectors, which included secret correspondence and memoranda of clandestine meetings, this paper illustrates the attempted exercise of hegemony by the apartheid state through its linked network with the university administration during the period 1960 to 1990. This is achieved by demonstrating the interaction between the state, Broederbond rectors and the black students at Fort Hare, who were subjected to persuasion and coercion as dictated by the state’s apartheid vision of a racially defined and separated society.

Author Biography

Pamela Johnson, University of Fort Hare

Senior Lecturer

Department of Political Science and International Relations

Published

2018-11-01

How to Cite

Johnson, Pamela. 2018. “Brothers in Arms: The Role of Broederbond Rectors in the Exercise of Hegemony at the University of Fort Hare, 1960–1981”. Politeia 37 (1):19 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/0256-8845/4372.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2018-05-25
Accepted 2018-09-11
Published 2018-11-01