Leo Kuper Papers, 1952-1966
Citation:
MF-4318 Neg. MF-at lab
Kuper, Leo, 1908-
Leo
Kuper papers, 1952-1966. [microform]
Chicago, Ill., University of Chicago, Photoduplication Dept.,
[19---?]
10 microfilm reels. negative. 35 mm.
Reel index on reel 1.
South African sociologist. One folder of correspondence
and 21 boxes of materials relating to the research conducted
between 1957 and 1963 for Kuper's study of An African Bourgeoisie.
OCLC# = 24148595
LEO KUPER (1908- ), PAPERS, 1952-1966
21 BOXES
SERIES 4
BIOGRAPHY
Leo Kuper was born November 24, 1908, in Johannesburg,
South Africa. After receiving his law degree from Witwatersrand
University in 1931, Kuper practiced law until 1940, when
he joined the South African Army. He served in the military
in Kenya, Egypt and Italy until 1946, when he returned to
South Africa to organize the National War Memorial Health
Foundation. This foundation helped to provide health services
initially for Africans, Coloureds and Indians, and was expanded
later to serve whites as well.
In 1947 Kuper attended the University of North Carolina,
from which he received an M.A. in sociology. After returning
briefly to South Africa, he was appointed Lecturer in Sociology
at the University of Birmingham in England. While in Birmingham,
Kuper also directed a research project, the purpose of which
was to help the city of Coventry recover from the destructive
bombing of World War II. This research resulted in the publication
of "Living in Towns" (1953), which Kuper edited.
After completing his doctorate in sociology at the University
or Birmingham in 1952, Kuper returned to South Africa as
Professor of Sociology at the University of Natal, where
he remained until 1961.
An active member of South Africa's Liberal Party, Kuper
published extensively in the field of race relations while
at the University of Natal. In addition to a satirical novel
on the newly segregated universities, "College Brew"
(1960), Kuper published "Passive Resistance in South
Africa" (1956), and "Durban; A Study of Racial
Ecology" (1958), with Hilstan Watts and Ronald Davies,
while teaching at the university.
In 1961 Kuper was appointed Professor of Sociology at the
University of California at Los Angeles, where he remained
until his retirement in 1976. While at UCLA, he served for
four years as the Director of the African Studies Center
and also as a member of the Board of Directors of the African
Studies Association. In 1965 Kuper published "An African
Bourgeoisie" (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965).
Based on research and interviews conducted in South Africa
in the late 1950s and early 1960s, this study of the black
professional and mercantile classes won the Melville Herskovits
Award. More recently, Kuper edited "Pluralism in Africa."
(1969) and has written "Race, Class, and Power"
(1974) and "The Pity of it All" (1977).
DESCRIPTION:
The collection is composed of one folder of correspondence
and 21 boxes of materials relating to the research conducted
between 1957 and 1963 for Leo Kuper's study of "An
African Bourgeoisie" (New Haven: Yale University Press,
1965). Kuper, assisted by two research assistants at the
University of Natal, Anthony Ngubo and Bernard Magubane,
conducted interviews with more than one hundred members
of South Africa's black professional class, including doctors,
lawyers, civil servants, teachers, ministers, nurses and
businessmen, whom Kuper identifies as "traders."
These interviews, and the more general reading notes and
newspaper files, comprise the basic document collection
upon which Kuper's sociological analysis of South Africa's
black middle class rested. The transcriptions of the interviews
suggest that Kuper was primarily interested in the issues
of mobility, freedom and perceived social status, and the
relation of these concepts to South Africa's aparthied racial
system. These interviews comprise the most valuable component
of the collection.
The collection is arranged primarily by subject, categories
which reflect the organization of Kuper's book. Most categories,
such as the various occupational groups, contain two basic
components: the primary source documentation and the analysis
upon which the narrative of his study is based. The primary
sources include transcriptions of interviews, reading notes,
statistics and questionnaire responses. The analyses consist
of interpretations written primarily by Kuper, although
his research assistants examined several topics carefully
and provided Kuper with written interpretations for his
book. In addition, six boxes of newspaper clippings, dated
almost exclusively 1959-1962, on many aspects of South African
life have been removed from the primary source materials
and arranged alphabetically by subject in boxes 16 through
21. A number of printed pamphlets and other published material
related to aparthied have been separated from the collection.
An online
finding aid for the print archives of his papers (held
at UCLA), which include his research materials, manuscripts,
books, other printed materials, audio tapes, videotapes
and microfilm, can be found at the "Online Archive
of California," a project of the California Digital
Library.

Container List:
[Reel 1]
Box 1
- Folders:
- Biographical
- Correspondence, 1954-1966
- Lectures
- Traders: Interviews I
- Traders: Interviews II
- Traders: African Traders Course, 1959 [Durban]
- Traders: Report on the African Journal, 1957-1959
- "Control of Trade" Report and Analysis,
1959
Box 2
Folders:
1. "The Cape Trading Report," 1955
2. Traders: General Files I
3. Traders: General Files II
[Reel 2]
4. Traders: Analysis
5. Students: Graduate Student Interviews
6. Students: Undergraduates and Life Histories
Interviews
Box 3
Folders:
1. Students: Medical School Interviews I
2. Students: Medical School Interviews and Notes
II
3. Students: Medical School Interviews and Notes
III
4. Students: Interviews by Anthony Ngubo
5. Students: Notes by Anthony Ngubo I
[Reel 3]
6. Students: Notes by Anthony Ngubo II
7. Problems of the Educated: Notes and Analysis
Box 4
Folders:
1. University Education Bill, 1959
2. Students: Misc. Notes and Interviews
3. Anthony Ngubo, "University Students,"
I
4. Anthony Ngubo, "University Students,"
II
5. Students: History of the Marian Buildings
I
6. Students: History of the Marian Buildings
II
7. University Aparthied: Analysis
8. Students: General Analysis
[Reel 4]
Box 5
Folders:
1. Students: Analysis
2. Students: Analysis
3. Students: Analysis
4. Students: Analysis
5. Teachers Union Materials
6. Teachers: Natal African Teachers Union Materials
7. Teachers: Notes on Race Relations
8. Teachers: Attitudes and Religion
9. History of Adams College
10. Interview with Selby Ngubo
11. Teachers: Misc. Notes
Box 6
Folders:
1. Teachers: Analysis I
2. Teachers: Analysis II
3. Teachers: Analysis III (Files, Notes, Statistics]
4. Teachers: Analysis IV [Social Class, Political
Attitudes]
5. Teachers: Analysis V [Statistics, Social
Composition]
6. Teachers: Analysis VI [Statistics]
7. Teachers: Analysis VII (Statistics]
[Reel 5]
8. Nurses: King Edward [Questionnaire]
9. Nurses: Clairwood
Box 7
Folders:
1. Nurses: Interviews
2. Nurses: Backgrounds
3. Nurses: Analysis
4. Ministers: Notes and Interviews I
5. Ministers: Notes and Interviews II
6. Doctors: Interviews, Notes, Research Materials
Box 8
Folders:
1. Lawyers and Articled Clerks
2. Clerks
3. Civil Servants: Interviews
[Reel 6]
4. Journalists and Social Workers: Interviews
and Notes
5. Authors and Health Educators
6. Professions [General]: Interviews
7. Lamont and Cato Manor: Interviews
8. Lamont and Cato Manor: Field Notes
Box 9
Folders:
1. Subjective Aspects of Social Class: Interviews
and Notes
2. "Who's Who" Biographical Information
3. Occupations [General]: Interviews and Notes
4. Professions: General Analysis
5. Religion: Notes
6. South African Religion: Notes
7. American Board Material
[Reel 7]
8. Protestants: Notes
9. Roman Catholics: Notes
Box 10
Folders:
1. Race Relations: Indians
2. Race Relations: General
3. Disturbances I
4. Disturbances II
5. Disturbances III
6. Powers of Control: Notes
7. Pan African Conference, 1959-1961: Notes
8. Politics: Notes
Box 11
Folders:
1. Advisory Boards: Interviews and Notes
2. Advisory Boards: Notes and Analysis
3. Advisory Boards: Lamontville
4. Advisory Boards: Chesterville
5. Advisory Boards: Tomster
6. Advisory Boards: Jacobs
7. Advisory Boards: Dalton Road
8. Advisory Boards: S.T. Smith
9. Advisory Boards: Baumannville
[Reel 8]
10. Advisory Boards: Views of Members
11. Advisory Boards: Regulations and Minutes
12. Advisory Boards: Reports on Trading File
Box 12
Folders:
1. African National Congress: Notes
2. African National Congress: Youth League,
1959
3. African National Congress: Minutes, 1960
4. African National Congress: Background of
Leaders
5. African National Congress: Conference on
Tomlinson Commission
6. Tribalism: interviews
7. Tribalism: Analysis
8. Bantu Laws
9. Bantu Education and Misc.
10. Voluntary Associations [Sports]: Interviews
11. Sports: Associations
[Reel 9]
Box 13
Folders:
1. Sports: Durban and District African Football
Association
2. Sports: International Olympic Committee Memo,
1961
3. Sports: Other Sports
4. Sports: Notes
5. Sports: Analysis I
6. Sports: Analysis II
Box 14
Folders:
1. Status of Women: Notes
2. Development of South African Personality
3. Conspicuous Consumption: Notes and Analysis
4. Urban Africa
5. Urban Administration
6. Scotch-Gampel Project
7. Colour Bar: Analysis
8. Durban International Club: General Materials
9. South African Native Affairs Commission
10. Conferences: Misc. Notes
[Reel 10]
11. Economic, Social and Political Background
Materials
Box 15
Folders:
1. Hilda Kuper: Natives Mine Wages Commission
Summary
2. Bernard Magubane: Bachelor's Thesis
3. Bernard Magubane: Master's Thesis
Return
to Camp Collection Guide Page
|