It was brought in to effect by the 1950 Population Registration Act which identified four different racial groups: White, Coloured, Bantu (Black) and others. It paints a stark picture of suffering and defiance in the face of misery, and it succeeded not only in giving the coloured community a much-needed voice, but also shining a light on the inhumanity of the apartheid regime.7 Recent Books on African History for the History Nerd In You ... ›

Why should I read a book by a foreign journalist on the history of apartheid?This particular book is about an obviously delicate subject, namely the system of racial segregation and superiority that was set up by the Dutch starting in the 1940's when the South African legislature began to be dominated by a particularly white nationalist party. Commenting on one particularly bloody skirmish, he wrote "A fight is a fight".Not a history book as such, but a fascinating insight into apartheid South Africa by a young Afrikaner who tried to shed his inbuilt racism but found it central to his identity. For Better Or For Worse: A Memoir of South Africa - During and After Apartheid (20th Century Memoirs) Book 2 of 2: 20th Century Memoirs | by Bernhard R. Teicher | Mar 22, 2019 3.0 out of 5 stars 2 It's a heavy critique of the apartheid regime and has been praised for its accurate representation of economic conditions in the 1960s Western Cape, where housing shortages displaced many coloured residents at the time. Apartheid: a history User Review - Not Available - Book Verdict.

There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Published 30 years ago during the apartheid years, it is still the best survey available. A work of stunning quality.Riveting memoir by one of the great moral and political role models of the 20th century, and required reading for anyone interested in a black perspective of the apartheid struggle. Be the first to ask a question about Apartheid The controversial 1913 Land Act, passed three years after South Africa gained its independence, marked the beginning of territorial segregation by forcing black Africans to live in reserves and making it illegal for them to work as sharecroppers. It details their vastly different but equally debilitating experiences with racism and highlights Ndebele's deft ability to handle ordinary people's lived experiences.La Guma's literary works have been all but forgotten over the years. The current Chancellor of the University of Johannesburg, Ndebele has always been adamant about African literature moving away from the all-too-easy narrative of poverty porn and the preoccupation with showing obvious oppression, but rather how and why people soldier on through the adversity and hardships. Should be compulsory reading. To see what your friends thought of this book,

Welcome back. https://www.topteny.com/top-10-best-books-about-south-africa-and-apartheid "Fools And Other Stories" is a collection of tales from the closing days of the apartheid regime in South Africa written by one of the Continent's most powerful voices of cultural freedom, Njabulo Ndebele.The narratives concern the effects of apartheid from those who enforce to those who suffer under its iron rule, like the title story about an old dissipated school teacher and one of his former students who has become an activist. by Rian Malan. The best books on Post-Apartheid Identity, recommended by Kevin Bloom. His second novel, "And a Threefold Cord" (1964), is set in the Cape Flats and explores contemporary themes of class conflict.Nadine Gordimer is one of the most influential writers in South African literary history. Raised by a white anti-apartheid activist mother and father who both died in prison, Rosa later becomes an activist herself but is plagued by a guilt of white privilege that leads to her own incarceration.Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Internationalism: MLK On Ghana, South ... ›Reverend Stephen Kumalo, whose brother and son are also in Johannesburg, finds that none of them are as he remembers. A fast-paced narrative - with wonderful descriptions of the fighting - is merely the icing on the cake.Donald Morris's peerless narrative is both a history of the rise and fall of the Zulu nation and a no-holds-barred account of British colonial and military policy in South Africa. In retrospect, it's a lesson, among other things, on the dangers of today's white liberalism written by a white liberal in the 1940s.Although race is a recurring issue throughout the book, it focuses more on themes of poverty, crime, bloodshed, homosexuality and the AIDS epidemic. But if Morris's scholarship is impressive, it is the quality of his sparkling prose that makes this book one of the greats.The future Lady Longford's groundbreaking study of the famous raid that foreshadowed the Boer War.