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BIOGRAPHY AS HISTORY IN THE NORTHERN CAPE - Luka Jantjie: Resistance Hero of the South African Frontier. By Kevin Shillington. London: Aldridge Press, 2011. Pp. xiv + 306. $85, hardback (ISBN 978-0230338531).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2013

CLIFTON CRAIS*
Affiliation:
Emory University
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012

Kevin Shillington has long labored in the dry lands of the Northern Cape, producing, alongside other more scholarly works, texts accessible to broad audiences. In Luka Jantjie he returns to research begun more than two decades ago to explore the life history of a man who came of age in the tumultuous years of South Africa's mineral revolution. Born to a chiefly family in the 1830s when the Northern Cape was just coming within the orbit of missionaries and an expanding British empire, Jantjie became an early example of what Shillington describes as a modern man: a literate pioneer convert with a keen business acumen and an astute understanding of South Africa's rapidly changing economic and political world.

That world ultimately defeated Jantjie and his people. By hook or by crook, colonists acquired large amounts of land. The Kimberly diamond mines offered as many dangers as opportunities. Aggressive British and Boer expansion set new, narrower parameters within which leaders like Jantjie could maneuver. Violent conflict soon seemed inevitable. In the closing years of the nineteenth century, Jantjie took up his Winchester rifle. Within months Jantjie was dead, shot to the chest; he was then decapitated and his head boiled in a vat of water to become a war trophy.

This, then, is Shillington's narrative arc: the rise and demise of an African man in an industrializing South Africa. It is also the story of a closing frontier. The early chapters covering Jantjie's birth and coming of age describe a world fraught with danger, but also one of change and possibility as new people moved into the northern Cape and as the region entered the orbit of expanding colonial societies: British, Boer, and Griqua. Missionaries such as Robert Moffat played an important role in introducing not just Christianity but also ideas about clothing and personhood and technologies such as printing and irrigation. Shillington demonstrates how the world the missionaries and their converts made led to new sensibilities and possibilities just as the age of liberal empire was about to be eclipsed by one of jingoistic nationalism and racial intolerance.

The bulk of Luka Jantjie concentrates on the three decades from the opening of the diamond fields to Jantjie's death. Many of the issues discussed are well known to specialists: industrial demands on labor and resources such as wood and food, the fractious relationships among British, Boer, and Griqua, and the steady expansion of empire from the Cape Colony. More interesting is Shillington's exploration of the complex reworking of Batlhaping politics as Jantjie made claims to authority, land, and resources and emerged as a powerful chief (kgosi). Here Shillington's research shines as he offers the reader a sense of Jantjie grappling with the challenges facing him and his people.

Shifting alliances and rising conflict marked the years following the 1881 Pretoria Convention that ended British-Transvaal conflict and recognized (again) the republic's sovereignty. The politics of land, including and perhaps especially that held within African-controlled areas, became ever more fraught as did the British administration of African territories. The last half of Luka Jantjie is devoted to the decade between the 1885–6 Land Commission and Jantjie's death. The commission restricted Africans to ‘communal’ lands while opening vast tracts to white colonists. In so doing, the commission definitively created a land crisis for Jantjie and his people and set African and British settler on a collision course.

The outbreak of rinderpest escalated an already deteriorating situation. During the war that finally settled conflicts that had been steadily mounting, Jantjie retreated to the mountains of the Langeberg where he was destitute, shivering in the hard winter, and outgunned. His defeat led not only to Jantije's death and dismemberment but also to the rounding up of prisoners, women, and children. Their brutal treatment became a subject of newspaper reports and humanitarian protest.

Wonderfully researched and lavishly illustrated, at times Luka Jantjie seems caught between an aspiration to reach a broad popular audience and a commitment to academic scholarship. Specialists may find themselves frustrated, wondering about what is historiographically new: the work is conventionally structured and in the end offers little insight into thinking about topics such as biography in African history. General readers may become lost in the details, unable to keep track of the scores of characters that populate Luka Jantjie. Nevertheless for those committed to knowing the rococo details of Northern Cape history, Luka Jantjie is well worth the effort.