Blue Book on Native Affairs
Author : South Africa. Department of Native Affairs
Publisher :
Page : 490 pages
File Size : 16,36 MB
Release : 1911
Category : Blacks
ISBN :
Author : South Africa. Department of Native Affairs
Publisher :
Page : 490 pages
File Size : 16,36 MB
Release : 1911
Category : Blacks
ISBN :
Author : Cape of Good Hope (South Africa). Native Affairs Department
Publisher :
Page : 224 pages
File Size : 47,5 MB
Release : 1879
Category : Indigenous peoples
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 212 pages
File Size : 23,59 MB
Release : 1898
Category : Colonies
ISBN :
Author : Sean Redding
Publisher : Ohio University Press
Page : 281 pages
File Size : 17,78 MB
Release : 2006
Category : Black people
ISBN : 0821417045
Publisher description
Author : Fiona Vernal
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 391 pages
File Size : 43,49 MB
Release : 2012-09-27
Category : History
ISBN : 0199843406
In The Famerfield Mission, Fiona Vernal recounts the history of an African Christian community on South Africa's troubled Eastern Cape frontier. Forged in the secular world of war, violence, and colonial dispossession and subjected to grand evangelical aspirations and social engineering, Farmerfield's heterogeneous mix of former slaves and displaced Africans from polities beyond the borders of the Cape Colony entered the powerful ideological arena of anti-slavery humanitarianism and evangelicalism. As a farm, an African residential site amid a white community, and a Christian mission on a violent frontier, Farmerfield was at once a space, a place, and an idea that Africans, missionaries, whites, and colonial authorities competed to mold according to their own visions. Founded in 1838 and destroyed by the apartheid government in 1962, Farmerfield's residents struggled over the meaning and content of a civilized, Christianized lifestyle, deploying a range of tactics from negotiation and dissimulation to deference and defiance. In the process, they vernacularized Christianity, endured the ravages of colonialism and apartheid, used their historical connections to the Methodist Church and South Africa's land reform legislation to regain land, and launched the Farmerfield experiment anew, amid new debates about the meaning of post-apartheid land access and citizenship. Farmerfield's propitious rise, protracted, frustrating decline and fledgling reincarnation reflect epochal chapters in South Africa's colonial, apartheid, and post-apartheid history as Africans attempted to define the terms of their cultural autonomy and economic independence.
Author : George Lakoff
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
Page : 156 pages
File Size : 46,78 MB
Release : 2012-06-26
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN : 147670001X
Provides guidelines for United States Democrats to connect moral values to important policies, using practical tactics to guide political discourse away from extreme positions.
Author : Oregon. Office of the Secretary of State
Publisher :
Page : 232 pages
File Size : 22,32 MB
Release : 1895
Category : Oregon
ISBN :
Author : Robin H. Palmer
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 452 pages
File Size : 31,28 MB
Release : 1977-01-01
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 9780520033184
Author : Martin Legassick
Publisher : NYU Press
Page : 409 pages
File Size : 36,86 MB
Release : 2016-04-01
Category : History
ISBN : 1868149552
The Gordonia region of the Northern Cape province has received relatively little attention from historians. In Hidden Histories of Gordonia: Land dispossession and resistance in the Northern Cape, 1800–1990, Martin Legassick explores aspects of the generally unknown ‘brown’ and ‘black’ history of the region. Emphasising the lives of ordinary people, his writing is also in part an exercise in ‘applied history’ – historical writing with a direct application to people’s lives in the present. Tracing the indigenous history of Gordonia as well as the northward movement of Basters and whites from the western Cape through Bushmanland to the Orange River, the book presents accounts of family histories, episodes of indigenous resistance to colonisation, and studies of the ultimate imposition of racial segregation and land dispossession on the inhabitants of the region. A recurrent theme is the question of identity and how the extreme ethnic fluidity and social mixing apparent in earlier times crystallised in the colonial period into racial identities, until with final conquest came imposed racial classification.
Author : Michael R. Mahoney
Publisher : Duke University Press
Page : 308 pages
File Size : 43,37 MB
Release : 2012-07-04
Category : History
ISBN : 0822353091
A detailed history explaining how and why, in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth, Africans from the British colony of Natal transformed their ethnic self-identification, constructing and claiming a new Zulu identity.