Jean P. Smith
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‘I still don’t have a country’
The southern African settler diaspora after decolonisation
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Using oral histories and memoirs, this chapter highlights the varied understandings of self and identity in the settler diaspora and the ways this was influenced by age at migration, subsequent experience and motivations for leaving the United Kingdom. With attention to performances of identity such as accent, interior design and leisure, it traces shifts in the ways these migrants positioned themselves and made sense of political changes such as the 1961 South African declaration of Republic, the 1965 Rhodesian Unilateral Declaration of Independence and the onset of majority rule in Zimbabwe in 1980 and South Africa in 1994. Nostalgia, especially for the southern African landscape and wildlife, is a common theme in these accounts, one that provided a way to discuss the loss of settler cultures and privileges without reference to race or politics. Though they were not as publicly visible as other settler exiles such as the pieds noir of Algeria and the Portuguese retornados, the chapter highlights the similar dislocation experienced by post-war British migrants to South Africa and Rhodesia, both when these nations declared independence from the United Kingdom and left the Commonwealth in the 1960s and again at the collapse of minority rule.

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Settlers at the end of empire

Race and the politics of migration in South Africa, Rhodesia and the United Kingdom

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