Black Republican Tradition, Nativism and Populist Politics in South Africa.
Transformation 2008, Sept, 68
-
- $5.99
-
- $5.99
Publisher Description
Introduction The South Asian historian Sumit Sarkar (1992:3) once stated that 'unimportant events of no obvious consequence which stick out and refuse to fit into any of the established patterns of historical reconstruction' are valuable insofar as they 'afford oblique entry points into social history and can throw light upon dimensions obscured by dominant--all too often teleological--analytical frameworks'. This is true of the Native Club, the emergence of which in 2006 spawned a flurry of intellectual and political activity and acrimonious debate circulating in both print and electronic media.
More Books Like This
Contemporary African Social and Political Philosophy
2018
Introduction (Ethics OF SCALE: RELOCATING POLITICS AFTER LIBERATION)
2010
Technology Beyond History: Re-Workings of Afrikaner Identity on the Internet.
2000
South Africa's Racial Past
2017
Values, Identity, and Sustainable Development in Africa
2022
Pan–Africanism: Exploring the Contradictions
2016
More Books by Transformation
Gender, Numbers and Substance: Women Parliamentarians and the 'Politics of Presence' in Kwazulu-Natal (Report)
2009
The Interconnections Between Environmental Philanthropy and Business: Insights from the Southern African Nature Foundation (Essay)
2009
Julie Parle (2007): States of Mind: Searching for Mental Health in Natal and Zululand, 1868-1918 (Book Review)
2008
Angola: From War to Peace (Book Review)
2009
Why Waste Money on Quarterly Labour Force Surveys? Waste It on Youth Development Instead!(Debate) (Report)
2009
Martin Legassick (2007): Towards Socialist Democracy (Critical Essay)
2008