South Africa Books


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South Africa Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

South Africa
Satyagraha in South Africa
Published in Paperback by (1997)
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Where Satyagraha / Non-Violence Began
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Review Date: 2008-06-26
First published in 1928 when his South African days were well over, this book provides invaluable insight into Gandhi's Satyagraha in South Africa. It is the place where his religious and philosophical commitment to non-violence began. Sadly an increasingly rare find, this book offers some mixed biographical overview with commentary about the strength and limitations of satyagraha, as well as the important first members to make it work. Gandhi was not alone, but had invaluable help from Muslims, European Christians, Parsis and many others.

South Africa
Savage Systems (Studies in Religion and Culture (Charlottesville, Va.).)
Published in Paperback by University Press of Virginia (1996-10-01)
Author: David Chidester
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Supporting Edward Said
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-26
This book, the Savage system by David Chidester highlighting colonialism and comparative religion in Southern Africa has proven the validity of Edward Said's thesis on Orientalism. In his Foucauldian work Orientalism. Said affirms that orientalism is an attempt to understand society group along with its culture in a way they look themselves. In another word, it is looking at society with your own perspectives. (Said, 1979) Unfortunately, as the orientalists were the references of the colonial power, it was one of the tools to hegemonize the power. The colonialists interpret the colonilized people in a way they want to prolong their colonialization. It was the power of knowledge. Once Said says in PBS TV: They (the Western sources) look the Arab, in a way I never understand it was my culture" David Chidister approaches similarly in his determination of comparative religions in Southern Africa in three periods; frontier, imperial, and Apartheid.

The frontier period, is the oldest period of comparative religion on southern Africa. In that, the earliest frontiers described African as people with no religion. no gods no worship, no temple. They similiarized African people with animal uncivilizedThe Imperial period is after the frontier era that is within the earlier days of colonial era. Not so much different from the previous period, the description of African people in this period is negative. African is just above the animal the have only the savage religion. They worship natural stuffs like three, animals, idols, stones, ect.

The apartheid comparative religion, although has been in a modern period, describes the African as just its previous period in which African were uncivilized, no religions and hold primitive religions in which Africans are described as worshipping the moon and the sun.

The three periods as Chidester highlights is in an accordance with his main thesis that comparative religions (religious study?) were very European centric. What was perceived as religion should fit with the European thought of religions. There should be one God, sanctuary, and prophet. Agreed with Foucault approach Chidester reveals this doles not successfully reveals what actually the reality belonged to African.

I think Chidester deserves appraise as he has successfully elaborated the European centric even in the comparative religions. Just as the same phenomena described for the colonized people in Malay and Indonesia or some Middle Eastern countries that Edward Said reveals. No other orientation in that creation except an attempt to marginalize the colonized people and to keep them colonized. It is undeniably true.

South Africa
Season of Hope: Economic Reform Under Mandela And Mbeki
Published in Paperback by University of Kwazulu Natal Press (2005-11-30)
Author: Alan Hirsch
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Guarded Overview of South African Economic Issues
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-01
Many conservatives believe in a myth that apartheid-era South Africa was well-managed and prosperous. In reality, when Nelson Mandela and the ANC came to power in 1994, they inherited a near-broke government and a very sick economy. Inflation was high, investment low, and growth negative. The white-owned corporate sector was risk-averse and oligopolistic. The distribution of income was the most unequal in the world, and, worst of all, the workforce had been hobbled by decades of education and job policies that had deskilled the majority black population. To create an enclave of privilege for whites, apartheid had wrecked the wider economy.

This book by Alan Hirsch, an economic advisor to President Thabo Mbeki, tells how the ANC responded to these huge challenges. Most of the news is good: the ANC adopted a market-friendly but social democratic approach to economics that restored public finances, resuscitated the economy (GDP growth is now almost 5 percent per year) and began to address the horrible social legacies of apartheid. Chapters deal with specific topics such as black economic empowerment, unemployment, trade policy, and macroeconomic stability. Technical issues are helpfully framed within the context of South African and ANC history. The writing is clear and straightforward. Anyone interested in modern South Africa should read the book -- not least white skeptics who warned that majority rule would lead to socialism, dictatorship and economic ruin.

Why did I give the book only four stars? For one thing, Hirsch isn't free to write frankly about debates inside the government or ANC, since hs still works for Mbeki. This limits the book's value as history. For the same reason, Hirsch can't own up squarely to ANC policy failures, such as the devastating growth of unemployment after 1994. This reticence is especially blatant on the subject of HIV/AIDS, which Hirsch barely mentions even though it's the biggest social and economic problem facing South Africa today. (Self-censorship at the top levels of the ANC has crippled discussion of HIV/AIDS ever since Mbeki embraced quack medical theories about the epidemic.) My final complaint is stylistic: Hirsch's narrative occasionally lapses into tedious summaries of research papers and policy documents, as if he went on automatic pilot while writing.

But these are quibbles rather than serious criticisms. Hirsch has written an intelligent and well-informed book, one that punctures myths on both the left (that the ANC "sold out" the revolution) and the right (that the ANC is extremist and anti-business). It makes a very constructive contribution to the public debate in South Africa, and deserves to be widely read and pondered.


South Africa
Shaka's Children
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins Publishers Ltd (1994-11-24)
Author: Stephen Taylor
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Entertaining and free of academic mumbo-jumbo.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-01
Because this book was released at the same time as John Laband released "Rope of Sand" there were bound to be comparisons, but Taylor escaped virtually unscathed. While Laband's masterpiece is majestic and quite brilliant, Taylor has assured his readers of an entertaining journey through nineteenth-century Zululand. Although there is no ground-breaking material contained in the book, it is well-researched and cleverly written. Taylor quotes extensively from the James Stuart Archives and other reliable sources. Sometimes, for instance when he writes about the relationship between the young Shaka and his mother Nandi, the tone becomes cluttered with melodrama. But there is no doubt that the age was one of great drama, and so Taylor is excused the verbose frillings. In conclusion, then, this is a fine historical book, worthy of any library and a tempting setwork for future South African history scholars.

South Africa
THE SOFT VENGEANCE OF A FREEDOM FIGHTER
Published in Paperback by PALADIN (1991)
Author: ALBIE SACHS
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An excellent book on the struggle in apartheid South Africa
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Review Date: 2008-04-20
An account of the attempt by the South African secret police on Albie Sachs' life while he was in exile in Maputo Mozambique during the 1980s.

South Africa
A Soldier's Embrace: Stories
Published in Paperback by Penguin (Non-Classics) (1982-01-28)
Author: Nadine Gordimer
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This is a selection of short stories which are well written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-05
These collection of stories are well put together and are very well written and i am looking forward to reading another book. I would recommend this book, but there are a few down sides.

South Africa
Somewhere Over the Rainbow
Published in Hardcover by Little, Brown Book Group (2000-01-01)
Author: Gavin Bell
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Travelling in South Africa
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-14
An easy to read book about the author's travels in South Africa. His journey begins in Cape Town and his route takes him up and through the Western Cape to the Northern Cape and across to Johannesburg, to Durban, Port Elizabeth and back to where he began his journey in Cape Town, visiting many interesting and familiar named places on the way. Never boring, and delightful glimpses of a way of life sometimes very different from that perceived here in the U.K.

South Africa
South Africa: Land of Sunshine. Photographs by Ezra Eliovson.
Published in Hardcover by Cape Town: Timmins (1953)
Author: Sima Eliovson
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Fascinating Glimpse
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Review Date: 2007-04-22
This large format book provides a fascinating glimpse into mid 19th C South Africa through numerous black and white photographs.

South Africa
South Africa: Troubled Land
Published in School & Library Binding by Franklin Watts (1992-10)
Author: Elaine Pascoe
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South Africa: The Toubled land
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Review Date: 2000-05-09
South Africa is a beatiful breathtaking land that is filled with great wealth of minerals covered by green rolling grassland. Although, it is filled with wonderful sight and rich fortune, it is also a the theatre of war, between the whites and the blacks for many centuries. Problems like racial discrimanation forced the country to lose over millions of people, innocent or not, during the years of conflicts. It became a system where the strong rises while the weak goes down. It became the home of many couregeous men who fought, not for their own life but for others who wanted equality. The book South Africa, the troubled land, is a history of events of the country's past, written by Elaine Pascoe. It was good to read and was extremely a great contribution to the literature world.

South Africa
The South African Campaign of 1879
Published in Hardcover by Greenhill Books (1995-07)
Authors: J. P. Mackinnon and S. H. Shadbolt
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Excellent reference work
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-19
This is a reprint of the 1880 edition of this classic reference work on the Zulu War of 1879. After a brief overview of the course of the campaign itself, the book presents a photo and a detailed biography of all 62 British Army & Navy officers who lost their lives. This is followed by a massive reference section which lists the war services of every unit that served in the war, plus a list of all officers with notes on their war services. London 1995 r/p ed, Greenhill, 8 x 10 3/4, semi-glossy paper, 39l pp, prof., illus, index.


Books-Under-Review-->Recreation-->Outdoors-->Speleology-->Show Caves-->Africa-->South Africa-->89
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