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Exile Identity, Agency and Belonging in South Africa; Foreword; Acknowledgements; Contents; Praise for Exile, Identity, Agency and Belonging in South Africa; List of Abbreviations; 1 Introduction; 1.1 The Everydayness of Exile; 1.2 "Generationing" Exile; 1.3 Generation as Historical Location; 1.4 Generation as Kinship Relations; 1.4.1 Kinship Relations in the South African Exile Context; 1.5 Generation as Life Cycle; 1.5.1 Social Age in the South African Exile Context; 1.6 Generation as Cohort; 1.6.1 The Masupatsela Generational Cohort; 1.7 Generationing Memory; Notes; References; Archives

InterviewsSecondary Literature; Part I EXILE; 2 Roots and Routes of Exile: Materialism and Embodiment; 2.1 Roots and Routes; 2.2 Memory, Materialism and Embodiment; 2.3 Materialised Roots of Exile; 2.4 Embodied Routes into Exile; 2.5 Goldfish and Cockroaches; 2.6 Losing a Mountain; 2.7 Conclusion; References; Interviews; Secondary Literature; 3 The Emergence of a Generational Cohort; 3.1 Moulding the Next Generation; 3.2 Targets and Victims of Political Violence; 3.3 Bringing the Political Home; 3.4 Political Play; 3.4.1 Respect, Reciprocity and Sacrifice; 3.5 Political Clubs

3.6 Education for Liberation3.7 Children as Political Agents; 3.8 Conclusion; Notes; References; Archives; Interviews; Secondary Literature; 4 Care and Protection in the Liminal Spaces of Exile; 4.1 Liminal Spaces; 4.2 Generation in Temporal Perspective; 4.3 Care and Protection in Kinship Relations; 4.3.1 Children Left Behind; 4.3.2 Lone Motherhood; 4.3.3 Negotiated Interdependence; 4.3.4 Emotional Support; 4.3.5 Generational Respect; 4.3.6 Discipline; 4.3.7 Gendered Tensions; 4.3.8 Strategic Responses to Violence; 4.4 Care and Protection in the Exile Family

4.5 Residential Care Provided by the ANC4.5.1 Child Protection; 4.6 Conclusion; Notes; References; Archives; Interviews; Secondary Literature; 5 Home, Identity and Belonging; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Social Exclusion as an Embodied and Sensory-Material Experience; 5.3 Cultural Homes and Identities; 5.3.1 Home as a Physical and Material Space; 5.3.2 Performances, Rituals and Material Artefacts; 5.3.3 Language; 5.4 Meta-Exile Homes and Identities; 5.4.1 Meta-Exile Identity; 5.4.2 Going Home; 5.5 Conclusion; Notes; References; Archives; Interviews; Secondary Literature; PART II RETURN

6 The Formal Repatriation of Children and Young People6.1 Voluntary Return; 6.2 Reintegration; Notes; References; Archives; Secondary Literature; 7 The Meeting of Myths and Reality; 7.1 Introduction: Conceptualising Homecoming; 7.2 The Myth of Homecoming; 7.2.1 Non-Places, Landscapes and Material Objects; 7.3 Interpersonal Realities; 7.4 Structural Realities; 7.4.1 Culture of Violence; 7.4.2 Gender; 7.4.3 Generation; 7.4.4 Race and Socio-Economic Status; 7.5 False Promises; 7.6 Conclusion; Notes; References; Archives; Interviews; Secondary Literature

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