The post-apartheid state in South Africa inherited many colonial legacies. It has transformed considerably over the past 25 years. But it retains mechanisms of a state that secured power for a select few at the expense of most of its citizens.
In my book, Queering Colonial Natal, I looked at the ways in which the settler state "queered" African and Indian social practices in the 19th century. By "queered" I mean that settler regimes defined these practices as threats to the social order they wanted to impose in colonial Natal -- established by the British in 1843, today South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province. They did this by decrying the practices as inherently wrong and themselves as superior and civilised.
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