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      Mutualism Despite Ostensible Difference: HuShamwari, Kuhanyisana, and Conviviality Between Shona Zimbabweans and Tsonga South Africans in Giyani, South Africa

      1 , 2
      Africa Spectrum
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          This ethnographic study explores forms of mutuality and conviviality between Shona migrants from Zimbabwe and Tsonga-speaking South Africans living in Giyani, South Africa. To analyse these forms of mutuality, we draw on Southern African concepts rather than more conventional development or migration theory. We explore ways in which the Shona concept of hushamwari (translated as “friendship”) and the commensurate xiTsonga category of kuhanyisana (“to help each other to live”) allow for conviviality. Employing the concept of hushamwari enables us to move beyond binaries of kinship versus friendship relations and examine the ways in which people create reciprocal friendships that are a little “like kin.” We argue that the cross-cutting forms of collective personhood that underlie both Shona and Tsonga ways of being make it possible to form social bonds across national lines, such that mutuality can be made between people even where the wider social context remains antagonistic to “foreigners.”

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          Capitalism and cheap labour-power in South Africa: from segregation to apartheid1

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            Medical Xenophobia and Zimbabwean Migrant Access to Public Health Services in South Africa

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              Babies, Bodies, and the Production of Personhood in North America and a Native Amazonian Society

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Africa Spectrum
                Africa Spectrum
                SAGE Publications
                0002-0397
                1868-6869
                April 2020
                April 13 2020
                April 2020
                : 55
                : 1
                : 33-49
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Anthropology, University of Cape Town, South Africa
                [2 ]Humanities Education Development Unit (EDU), University of Cape Town, South Africa
                Article
                10.1177/0002039720914311
                1fb35d40-3b79-4ff8-95a7-08600cdbb61c
                © 2020

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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