South Africa Books


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

South Africa
Leaders of the North and South: Civil War (American War Library)
Published in Library Binding by Lucent Books (2000-01)
Author: Diane Yancey
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Average review score:

Review on Leaders of the north and south
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-29
This book includes the basic important information on the Leaders of the Civil War(both in the north and south). This book is very helpful for research.

South Africa
Lessons of Struggle: South African Internal Opposition, 1960-1990
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press, USA (1992-03-05)
Author: Anthony W. Marx
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descriptive dissertation of apartheid south africa
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-06
Anthony Marx brings a short history of the South African anti-apartheid movement in a descriptive, enriching way. Marx starts his time frame in 1960, but he does provide a brief history of the origins of the country and its harsh segregated policy of apartheid. the book deals with the evolution of domestic groups in their aims to reform the state. this is done, obviously, chronologically, stopping along the way for descriptions and analysis of the groups' activities and actions against the government. his stance holds him from giving an objective view of both sides of the historical picture in South Africa. the anti-apartheid groups discussed, such as the Black Consciousness movement, the ANC-aligned United Popular Front, and a myriad of trade unions, all are adequately described, analyzed, and reviewed, however the government's understanding of apartheid (even though it was catagorically WRONG) as well as the white minority's jaded thoughts of the non-white peoples of South Africa are not discussed for me to have seen their reasoning for holding on to the apartheid policy. nonetheless, if the reader wants to see how black movements succeeded and the an evaluation of their actions towards success, this book will be beneficial. i enjoyed his thoughts of each period in the thirty-year timeframe, and his ability to intelligently weigh the positive and negative outcomes. other respected persons (such as Tilly and Skocpol) credit Marx's ability to communicate the opposition movements development and evaluate their effectiveness.

South Africa
Letters to Gabriella: Angola's Last War for Peace, What the UN Did and Why
Published in Paperback by Florida Literary Foundation (2005-06-01)
Author: Leon Kukkuk
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If you hate the UN, this book is for you
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-13
If you believe, as I, that the United Nations is a bloated, corrupt, inept, inefficient, and arrogant organization then this book is for you. The author spent several years in Huambo, Angola working on a development project under the auspices of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP). UNDP could not account for money spent, who it went to or for what purpose. Meanwhile, the author and his staff struggled without salaries, supplies, and guidance while still making a meaningful contribution. Plus, Huambo was in the middle of a civil war. I'd give the book 5 stars, but Kukkuk really delves into the contracts, booklets, and correspondence as he struggles to save his project. It can get to be too much, but then again, he suffered through the time period. The book has an excellent account about the Angolan civil war, but the main focus of the text is the author's unbelievable struggle with UNDP. For a program designed to help the less fortunate, UNDP in Angola, at least, does nothing but worry about glossy reports, avoiding responsibility, and waiting for pay day and the chance to go on holiday paid for by the UN. A stunning indictment of the arrogance and condescending attitude shown not only to the people they are suppose to serve, but the host government as well.

South Africa
Lonely Planet Africa the South (Lonely Planet Travel Guides)
Published in Paperback by Lonely Planet Publications (1997-09)
Authors: David Else, Jon Murray, and Deanna Swaney
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Lonely Planet Africa: The South: Travel Survival Kit
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-03
A must-have if traveling through one of the most exotic parts of the world. Our family's journey took up the Matubu River in Bostwana and back across the wild plains of the Jelowi Game reserve in South Africa. There wasn't a day which went by, where my dear daughters did not consult the guide for local cultural tidbits and useful, if not a bit tiny, georgraphical maps. Other than a few dated portions, namely the prices and hostel locations, we highly recommend this book to first time travellers and returnees. Wonderful pictures, if not small again, and consice descriptions of the natural history. Once again, well done Lonely Planet!

South Africa
Majuba 1881: The Hill Of Destiny (Campaign)
Published in Paperback by Osprey Publishing (1996-11-15)
Author: Ian Castle
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Very Good Read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-31
Majuba 1881: The Hill of Destiny (Osprey Military Campaign Series, 45)by Ian Castle is a fine example of what the Ospery Campaign series can achieve. In 90 pages, using the ususal format, the author gives a compelling overview of the whys and wherefores relating to the battle. While one understands that there are things that are left out, when one finishes the book one at least knows the basics.

I would recommend this book for anyone who wants to get an overview before reading further regarding the Second Boer War (@1900)or the events that shaped South Africa. This is a positive read, is written in very readable prose, and I would recommend it.

South Africa
The Making of Modern South Africa: Conquest, Apartheid, Democracy (Historical Association Studies)
Published in Paperback by Wiley-Blackwell (2007-08-24)
Author: Nigel Worden
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Average review score:

interesting
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-02
Picking up where David Yudelman's The Emergence of Modern South Africa: State, Capital, and the Incorporation of Organized Labor on the South African Gold Fields, 1902-1939 (Contributions in Comparative Colonial Studies) this book seeks to complete the picture of the development of South Africa. However it primarily views this through a post-apartheid lens where there is a good versus evil approach where the 'indigenous' people are always suppressed by the 'evil' people from outside.

This is a narrow minded view. the idea that South Africa's history is primarily one of 'conquest' and 'Apartheid' is a mistaken view. Afrikaners lived in South Africa for two hundred years before the advent of Apartheid. The 'conquest' of South Arica was one that also involved Zulus conquering others. This book seems to ignore this diverse history, especially as it relates to the Coloured people and the Indian/Asian population of South Africa. This is unjust and an unfair telling of history, especially as it ignores the evils of the Boer War.

But this is history as it is being told.

Seth J. Frantzman

South Africa
Making of Modern South Africa: Conquest, Segregation and Apartheid (Historical Association Studies)
Published in Paperback by Blackwell Publishers (2000-07)
Author: Nigel Worden
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Average review score:

Great study on the History of Apartheid
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-29
The structure and narrative of Nigel Worden's The Making of Modern South Africa: Conquest, Segregation and Apartheid is perhaps what makes this volume of the Historical Association Studies accessible not only to historians, but social historians who are looking beyond the nationalism of the African and Afrikaner to study how rural culture and townships in South Africa were affected from the colonial conquests of the 18th Century through the present. Maps of African societies in the nineteenth century; The Union of South Africa in 1910; "Native Reserves" of 1913 and 1936'; and the Bantustans, or Homelands, all provide a tangible, physical view of the changing nature of South Africa's political topography. Worden's extremely detailed Outline Chronology provides the reader with extensive information regarding South Africa from the "Pastoralist revolution" in c. 1000 BCE, through the British annexation of Natal in 1843, to the Introduction of Indian indentured laborers to Natal in 1860, which subsequently ended in 1911. Worden's Chronology illustrates how the making of apartheid was evident even before the South African "Boer" War in 1899-1902 with the Glen Grey Act of 1894 establishing separate land and tax systems for Africans on the eastern Cape.
One of Worden's arguments states that the two explanations for the changing map of South Africa after the Zulu defeated the British were 1) Britain's desire to unify the region in order to control and 2) Britain was at this point in time representative of "the wider scramble for empire, particularly in Africa, amongst European powers." Worden's answer to these theories posited by historians prior to 1970 is that it was, in fact "The discovery of valuable mineral deposits and the need to secure labor supplies to mine them made the South African interior a highly desirable region for the British to control directly." (19) Yet mining was not the only available labor force in migrant labor. Many South Africans avoided wage labor by cultivating crops for commercial production, supplying the necessary cash for taxes and good. (46) The effect was a backlash with the victory of Het Volk in the 1907 Transvaal elections by "promis[ing] to restore white rural hegemony at the expense of African producers." (48) The Natives Land Act of 1913 passed by the Union Government forbade the purchase of land by Africans outside known reserves. Conflicts and resistance by South Africans was omnipresent and pronounced, and brought in the Industrial and Commercial Worker's Union (ICU), which ultimately weakened by the late 20s.
After providing a heavy dose of the background against which Apartheid is placed, Worden proceeds to explain how racial discrimination in South Africa came to be. The process was part of European imperialism, into which ideas of the west being obligated to "civilize" natives hastened expansion, and the Darwinist idea of evolution was being applied to the human race. Unlike other nations where white supremacism was strong (like other British colonies in Africa, Asia, and the U.S.), in South Africa it was the lines on which the economic and political structure was shaped. Worden carefully examines the origins of the structured form of racial superiority, and notes that almost immediately they emerged with the Dutch East India Company Officials maintaining the hierarchy. (66) Apartheid eventually emerged as a facet of Afrikaner nationalism. Apartheid became a means of excluding Africans from political power, and in the 1950s, while experiencing its "heyday," it also met substantial protest. The protests declined in the 1960s, but gained momentum in the 70s and 80s. Worden concludes that it was the variety of civil wars in South Africa, with the population alienated from the state and sanctions effectively slowing the economy, which seriously began to force apartheid into decline. But his book is disturbingly written as though unfinished, possibly partially because Nigel Worden himself does not see apartheid, as we know it today to be finished.

South Africa
Marine Shells of South Africa
Published in Hardcover by Ekogilde Publishers (1998)
Authors: D. G Steyn, Douw G. Steyn, and Markus Lussi
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Average review score:

A good guide to South African shells.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-13
This is a very useful book with clear colour photographs. Descriptions and photographs are placed side-by-side which avoids paging back and forth. Each description is provided with a small map which clearly shows the range of the species. The most recent classification is used, but it is annoying that older, more familiar names have not been included. A full biliography and glossary is provided together with explanatory notes.

South Africa
Marriage of Inconvenience: The Persecution of Ruth and Seretse Khama
Published in Hardcover by Routledge (1990-06)
Author: Michael Dutfield
List price: $24.95
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Average review score:

Triumph of right over wrong
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-14
This is the story of a remarkable couple-Seretse Khama and his wife Ruth Willaims who overcame every obstacle put by the British Governmebnt to prevent Seretse taking up his lawful position as paramount Chief of his Bamanguata tribe in Bechuanaland -now Botswana.The white dominated Government of South Africa were afraid of the effect that the marriage of the Black Chief of a neighboring country to a white English lady would have on their emerging policy of Apartheid and the S.A Government brought every pressure to bear on the British Government to try and prevent the marriage taking place.

In the end right overcame wrong and Seretse went on to become the first President of Botswana and died in 1979. His wife Ruth played an important role in the Red Cross till her death.

The book is a good historical and human story.

South Africa
Mhudi: An epic of South African native life a hundred years ago
Published in Unknown Binding by Lovedale Press (1930)
Author: Sol. T Plaatje
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First novel by Black South African Published in English
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1997-04-11
A story of a relationship between an African man and woman, set in the Orange Free State region of South Africa during the Mfecane and Boer expansion. This is a more intimate and personal examination of the effects of these historical trends through the eyes of a young couple displaced by the battles and skirmishes. Although not sophisticated as a work of fiction, Mhudi is nonetheless a moving and insightful view of this period of history from an African perspective, as well as a piece of history in itself. Written by one of South Africa's true renaissance men whose contribution to his nation and people remains sadly underreported


Books-Under-Review-->Sports-->Equestrian-->Breeds-->Arabian-->Breeders-->South Africa-->86
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