| Type | Journal Article - Africa |
| Title | ‘Tata ma chance’: On contingency and the lottery in post-apartheid South Africa |
| Author(s) | |
| Volume | 82 |
| Issue | 01 |
| Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2012 |
| Page numbers | 41-68 |
| URL | http://www.lse.ac.uk/anthropology/research/popular_economies/van wyk 35.pdf |
| Abstract | As a relative latecomer to the global Lottery industry, the South African government launched a National Lottery on the 2nd of March 2000, six years after the country?s first democratic election. The Lottery operator encouraged people to “Tata ma chance, tata ma millions” (Take a chance, take millions), an invitation South Africans found hard to resist. But, despite this invocation of „chance?, and countering the claims that gambling is seen as a means to procure wealth through magical rather than more economically rational routes (J. and J. L. Comaroff (1997; 1999; 2000: 318-328) gambling among the poor of Cape Town is experienced as a means through which unpredictability is controlled rather than invited. It is seen as being governed by forms of causation other than luck, as exhibiting a formalized and institutionalized character or even of being „downright respectable? (Krige 2011). It is an economic activity rather than a leisure pursuit: a technology to reach the inaccessible arena of the market, just as likely to yield a return as other activities such as informal trading. The Lottery appears to be a means of shoring up the once-predictable flows of money and power, relying on unseen forces as a means to avoid unpredictable situations or to manipulate risk, and hence almost to „calculate? risk in relation to other, often equally „chancy?, economic scenarios |
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