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Women: South Africans of Indian Origin 150 Years of Struggle: From Indenture to Freedom
Devi Rajab
€ 34.99
€ 29.83
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Description for Women: South Africans of Indian Origin 150 Years of Struggle: From Indenture to Freedom
Hardcover. History continues to largely reflect narratives of victors. South African post-apartheid history has not escaped the risk of distortions and omissions that come from excluding critical voices and players in our struggle for democracy. Num Pages: 240 pages, Full colour. BIC Classification: HBJH; JFSJ1. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 236 x 253 x 21. Weight in Grams: 1232.
History continues to largely reflect narratives of victors. South African post-apartheid history has not escaped the risk of distortions and omissions that come from excluding critical voices and players in our struggle for democracy. This title steps into a critical gap in our understanding of our evolution into a society united in its diversity. Despite the centrality of gender equality in our human rights based National Constitution, women in South Africa continue to struggle to have their voices heard and their faces seen in public affairs. Their role in the struggle for freedom tends to be reduced to a support one despite their critical leadership in areas where men were afraid to go such as challenging the pass laws. Indian women are even less visible and audible given their demographic minority and cultural invisibility. The strength of this title lies in its focus on personal profiles of Indian women - giving them not only space to tell their stories, but to do so as individuals who are nested in very strong family, community and cultural networks. Their personal narratives take the reader into the heart, home and hopes of women often ignored in public discourse. These narratives also take us ever so gently into a rich cultural milieu - not just the rich smells of spices or the glittering jewellery - but lives textured beyond cliches of subservience and dominance. These are also narratives of resilience of a culture that transcended the humiliation of the system of indenture to thrive in a democracy. The social history captured in this title will add considerably to our understanding of ourselves as a society that draws its cultural heritage from so many parts of the world. India's rise as an economic giant and a mature democracy bears important lessons for us as a young democratic nation. We have the links to tap into those lessons - positive and negative - to inform our own development. Young women across all cultural groups have much to learn from the affirmation of Indian culture and its contribution to self-confidence and pride in ourselves as a people. Too many young people are losing the cultural anchors that should support and sustain them. Many others are focusing on fragments of threatened cultures to perpetuate conservative chauvinistic practices. Cultures evolve to meet the needs of rapidly changing complex global imperatives. Creative responses are essential to sustainability of our cultural heritage. Narratives in this book should make us proud to be South Africans and to salute our Indian women fellow citizens who have contributed so much to what we are today - a democratic vibrant South Africa.
Product Details
Publisher
Jacana Media (Pty) Ltd South Africa
Number of pages
240
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2011
Condition
New
Weight
1232g
Number of Pages
240
Place of Publication
Johannesburg, South Africa
ISBN
9781431401048
SKU
V9781431401048
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-2
About Devi Rajab
Devi Moodley Rajab is a psychologist; an award-winning journalist for the Mercury in Durban, South Africa; and a columnist for Confluence, a London-based newspaper on South Asian perspectives. She is the four-time recipient of the Vodacom Journalist of the Year Award and the recipient of the Turquoise Harmony Institute Media Award for outstanding journalism. She is also the author of Devi's Diary and No Subject Is Taboo. Ranjith Kally is an award-winning photographer whose career has spanned four decades. He was a principal photographer for the iconic Drum Magazine, and his work has been exhibited as part of the Nobel Peace Center's commemoration of South Africa's Nobel Peace laureates. He is an associate of the Royal Photographic Society and the author of The Struggle: 60 Years in Focus.
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