From Plough to Entrepreneurship is motivated largely by the fact that
Africans were deprived of economic and political autonomy by white
government in South Africa. This marginalisation lies in the complex and
interconnected processes of displacement and dispossession by which
Africans were first dispossessed of their own land; then deprived of
independent productive opportunities. The increasing scarcity of land as
scarce commodity and African land ownership in Evaton, best explains the
history of African local economic independence. For the local residents,
land possession in Evaton provided a space where a moral economy that
fostered racial pride and solidarity was forged. This richly sourced
monograph develops the logical explanation that sticks together all
forces that constrained Africans to give up labour to an industrial
economy in Evaton. It provides the reader and student of racialised
inequalities in South Africa with an understanding steeped in historical
ethnography on how local Africans struggled for economic independence,
and how whatever independence their struggles yielded, changed over time
in Evaton.