South Africa Books
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EXCELLENT MAPReview Date: 2005-05-01

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Lonely Planet scores again!Review Date: 2006-03-14

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Fascinating account of pre-modern British MilitaryReview Date: 2000-03-01


A definitive glimpse at a war, a soldier and a causeReview Date: 2000-06-10
This book focuses mainly on MacBride's service in the Boer War, the politics and passions of the Irish involvement, and his relationship with the flamboyant Maud Gonne, who bore his two children. MacBride is not a perfect hero, which makes him (and this book)all the more engaging.
Dr. McCracken's book is well-wrought history, finely detailed and comprehensively researched. It is also a darn good story, well told. He's a devoted scholar and historian, and a fine writer. I would recommend this work highly to any student of Irish republicanism and/or the Boer War.

Great South African Econ TextbookReview Date: 2006-07-17
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The spirit of the BackveldReview Date: 2000-07-03

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Best-Written Book by an Africanist Historian {4 1/2 stars}Review Date: 2003-01-12
White's sense of drama is aided by some highly dramatic personages who figure prominently in his story. The most famous is missionary-explorer David Livingstone, a perennially fascinating, complex and influential shaper of the continent's destiny. He visited Magomero, site of the ill-fated Universities' Mission to Central Africa, frequently on two expeditions in the 1850s and 1860s. White perceptively examines the ambiguities of Livingstone's antislavery crusade, not least the paradox of purchasing slaves in order to free them---thus inadvertently stimulating the market. But John Chilembwe is just as interesting: a Malawian Protestant minister and protonationalist who studied in the USA, founded an independent mission, and eventually died leading a doomed rebellion against British rule in 1915. The later chapters are not as event-oriented, but the lucid accounts of cash cropping and womens' work are probably more representative of daily life in the colonial era, and a major contribution to social and economic history.
"Magomero" does not have detailed source notes (they tend to scare off the mass audience White aims for here), but references to scholars' names without the titles of their works ensure that only specialists can swiftly identify White's sources. The other problem is that the author's own account of villagers' accepting his presence and explanation of his research is awkwardly unconvincing; it would be more credible in the words of Malawians themselves, without assuming that they care about associations with long-dead muzungus (Europeans). These minor faults aside, this is the most enjoyable scholarly book I've come across in nearly 20 years in African Studies. For more on the area's history, see E. Mandala, "Work and Control in a Peasant Economy" and M. Vaughan, "The Story of an African Famine." G. Shepperson & T. Price, "Independent African," a classic on Africa, tells the Chilembwe story with great depth and sensitivity. For an authentic Nyasaland account based on oral data from participants in the Rising, see G.S. Mwase, "Strike a Blow and Die."

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What is "Making Use of History" about?Review Date: 2004-06-03
A case study of the experiences in South Africa succeeds the introduction and probes deeper into the problems of using of history as political ammunition and literature as historical counterdiscourse. The historical time under review spans from the late 1980s to 1994 and the subsequent literary contention with this period and its historiography is examined in three literary works: Mongane Serote's Gods of Our Time, Mike Nicol's The Ibis Tapestry, and Zakes Mda's Ways of Dying. The theoretical framework through which these novels are analysed is provided by Michael Green's compelling theories on the interaction of the discourses of literature and history as propounded in his book Novel Histories.
The basic thesis of Making Use of History is that meta-conflicts - the distortion of truths and epistemologies that have evolved and been consolidated by historiographies of confrontation - continue, to a great extent, to determine a population's perception of reality long after the immediate conflict has ended.
For this reason a re-examination of the historiography of the past is of great importance, firstly in order to make an opening for reconciliation and forgiveness and, secondly, in order to break way for a future founded on a basis of inclusive values.
The literary engagement with the past, as concluded in the analyses of the three South African novels, seeks to rupture the continuity of a strongly dichotomised epistemology and through that dissolve the inherited polarisation of society. Falsification of history is exposed as constructed discourse and past simplifications of reality as sharply demarcated into homogenous self-justifying, categorisations of, Us against Them, are challenged with paradox, doubt and introspection. Likewise, the literary charge challenges conventional historical science by problematising its claim to truth, the assumption of objectivity and empirical documentation.
The body of South African literature and literary criticism is interesting in the study of counter-histories not just due to its intensity and actuality; it also offers new perspectives on the efforts of decentralising and democratising the political use of history. Accordingly, the selection of literature and literary criticism in this book presents a search for a new form of historiography that disallows the privileged position enjoyed by centres of power in defining collective histories. This is attempted by changing the rules and games of historical discourse from being instruments that are easily appropriated to legitimise the politics of the present to mechanisms that will always position history against present politics. Rather than endorsing the present, history gets to relativise the ideologies, truths and identity formations of the present.
Making Use of History views the literary engagement with the past from several angles that concern the process of understanding and re-composing the past. The need of remembrance, forgetting, guilt and forgiveness enter as important elements in the creation of a collective history. In this way, the book touches on several issues concerning a great number of torn societies - Chile, Rwanda, Guatemala, Cambodia, ex-Yugoslavia - that share the experience with South Africa of going through a transition from a past of animosity to a present of integration.

Must Have ReferenceReview Date: 2007-07-18

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Excellent second book on Mandela's life.Review Date: 2006-12-11
The book provides a fascinating view on the crafting of the Mandela icon by himself and those around him. It is also interesting to understand the details that Mandela has consciously chosen not to include in his autobiography, such as, for example, some of the more humiliating treatments inflicted on him by South African prison guards.
Considering the book's relatively short length, Lodge's assessment of the important events underlying Mandela's life is, in many cases, remarkably extensive, often considering the view of multiple sources from varying stand points. That being said, Mandela's political development, especially in the period of time prior to his long term imprisonment, is multifaceted and involves a large number of people and organizations. As a result, readers for whom this is an introduction to Mandela's story might be better off starting with his autobiography, "Long Walk to Freedom", and reading Lodge's work as an excellent second book on this subject.
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