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MagazineSouth African Garden and Home-October 2023




South African Garden and Home-October 2023

South African Garden and Home-October 2023
English | 102 Pages | PDF | 44.58 MB





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E-BooksCivil Rights and Beyond African American and Latinoa Activism in the Twentieth-century United States



Civil Rights and Beyond African American and Latinoa Activism in the Twentieth-century United States
Free Download Civil Rights and Beyond: African American and Latino/a Activism in the Twentieth-century United States By Brian D. Behnken
2016 | 270 Pages | ISBN: 082034916X | PDF | 2 MB
Civil Rights and Beyond examines the dynamic relationships between African American and Latino/a activists in the United States from the 1930s to the present day. Building on recent scholarship that explores black-Latino/a relations in the United States, this book pushes the timeframe for the study of interactions between blacks and a variety of Latino/a groups beyond the standard chronology of the civil rights era. As such, the book merges a host of community histories--each with their own distinct historical experiences and activisms--to explore group dynamics, differing strategies and activist moments, and the broader quests of these communities for rights and social justice. This book is framed around the concept of "activism," which most fully encompasses the relationships that blacks and Latinos have enjoyed throughout the twentieth century. Wide ranging and pioneering, Civil Rights and Beyond explores black and Latino/a activism from California to Florida, Chicago to Bakersfield--and a host of other communities and cities--to demonstrate the complicated nature of African American-Latino/a activism in the twentieth-century United States.



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E-BooksReading Contemporary African Literature Critical Perspectives



Reading Contemporary African Literature Critical Perspectives
Free Download Reading Contemporary African Literature: Critical Perspectives By Reuben Makayiko Chirambo (editor), J. K. S. Makokha (editor)
2013 | 444 Pages | ISBN: 9042036753 | PDF | 7 MB
Reading Contemporary African Literature brings together scholarship on, critical debates about, and examples of reading African literature in all genres - poetry, fiction, and drama including popular culture. The anthology offers studies of African literature from interdisciplinary perspectives that employ sociological, historical, and ethnographic besides literary analysis of the literatures. It has assembled critical and researched essays on a range of topics, theoretical and empirical, by renowned critics and theorists of African literature that evaluate and provide examples of reading African literature that should be of interest to academics, researchers, and students of African literature, culture, and history amongst other subjects. Some of the essays examine authors that have received little or no attention to date in books on recent African literature. These essays provide new insights and scholarship that should broaden and deepen our understanding and appreciation of African literature.



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E-BooksFacing Freedom An African American Community in Virginia from Reconstruction to Jim Crow



Facing Freedom An African American Community in Virginia from Reconstruction to Jim Crow
Free Download Daniel B. Thorp, "Facing Freedom: An African American Community in Virginia from Reconstruction to Jim Crow "
English | ISBN: 0813943574 | 2019 | 312 pages | EPUB | 2 MB
The history of African Americans in southern Appalachia after the Civil War has largely escaped the attention of scholars of both African Americans and the region. In Facing Freedom, Daniel Thorp relates the complex experience of an African American community in southern Appalachia as it negotiated a radically new world in the four decades following the Civil War. Drawing on extensive research in private collections as well as local, state, and federal records, Thorp narrates in intimate detail the experiences of black Appalachians as they struggled to establish autonomous families, improve their economic standing, operate black schools within a white-controlled school system, form independent black churches, and exercise expanded―if contested―roles as citizens and members of the body politic. Black out-migration increased markedly near the close of the nineteenth century, but the generation that transitioned from slavery to freedom in Montgomery County established the community institutions that would survive disenfranchisement and Jim Crow.



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E-BooksThe Critical Imagination in African Literature Essays in Honor of Michael J. C. Echeruo



The Critical Imagination in African Literature Essays in Honor of Michael J. C. Echeruo
Free Download The Critical Imagination in African Literature: Essays in Honor of Michael J. C. Echeruo By Maik Nwosu (editor), Obiwu (editor)
2015 | 304 Pages | ISBN: 0815633874 | PDF | 3 MB
In African studies, the "Echeruoan ideal" is understood as an intervention or intellectual engagement characterized by a broadness of vision as well as a depth of analysis. The essays gathered in this volume celebrate that ideal and honor Echeruo's contribution to the African intellectual tradition.Editors Nwosu and Obiwu explore the driving forces in the literature of Africa and the African diaspora. Contributors examine such themes as migration and exile, trauma and repression, violence and rebellion, and gender and human rights. Showcasing a rich diversity of cultural and academic backgrounds, this volume inaugurates a new paradigm for further examination of African literature as world literature and for analysis of African literature through the lens of psychoanalytic semiotics. While varied in modes of inquiry, the essays are unified in their ambition to explore new theoretical directions, reinvigorating the conversation around how African literature is read and studied.



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E-BooksAfrican Women Writers and the Politics of Gender



African Women Writers and the Politics of Gender
Free Download African Women Writers and the Politics of Gender By Sadia Zulfiqar
2016 | 230 Pages | ISBN: 1443897477 | PDF | 2 MB
This work examines the work of a group of African women writers who have emerged over the last forty years. While figures such as Chinua Achebe, Ben Okri and Wole Soyinka are likely to be the chief focus of discussions of African writing, female authors have been at the forefront of fictional interrogations of identity formation and history. In the work of authors such as Mariama Bâ (Senegal), Buchi Emecheta (Nigeria), Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (Nigeria), Tsitsi Dangarembga (Zimbabwe), and Leila Aboulela (Sudan), there is a clear attempt to subvert the tradition of male writing where the female characters are often relegated to the margins of the culture, and confined to the domestic, private sphere. This body of work has already generated a significant number of critical responses, including readings that draw on gender politics and colonialism, but it is still very much a minor literature, and most mainstream western feminism has not sufficiently processed it. The purpose of this book is three-fold. First, it draws together some of the most important and influential African women writers of the post-war period and looks at their work, separately and together, in terms of a series of themes and issues, including marriage, family, polygamy, religion, childhood, and education. Second, it demonstrates how African literature produced by women writers is explicitly and polemically engaged with urgent political issues that have both local and global resonance: the veil, Islamophobia and a distinctively African brand of feminist critique. Third, it revisits Fredric Jamesons claim that all third-world texts are national allegories and considers these novels by African women in relation to Jamesons claim, arguing that their work has complicated Jamesons assumptions.



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E-BooksAfrican Literature and the Future



African Literature and the Future
Free Download African Literature and the Future By Gbemisola A. Adeoti (ed.)
2015 | 103 Pages | ISBN: 2869786336 | PDF | 4 MB
Many African countries achieved independence from their colonisers over five decades ago, but the people and the continent largely remain mere spectators in the arena of their own dance. The post-independence states are supposed to be sovereign, but the levers of economic and political powers still reside in the donor states. Not in many fora is the complex reality that defines Africa more trenchantly articulated than in imaginative literature produced about and on the continent. This is the crux of the essays collected in African Literature and the Future. The book reflects on Africa's past and present, addressing anxieties about the future through the epistemological lens of literature. The contributors peep ahead from a backward glance. They dissect the trend and tenor of politics and their impact on the socio-cultural and economic development of the continent as portrayed in imaginative writings over the years. One salient feature of African literature is the close affinity between art and politics in its polemics. This is well established in all the six essays in the book as the authors stress the interconnections between literature and society in their textual analyses. On the whole, there is an overwhelming feeling of angst and pessimism, but the authors perceive a glimmer of hope despite daunting odds, under different conditions. Thus, they depict the plausible fate of Africa in the twenty-first century, as informed by its ancient and recent past, gleaned from primary texts.



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E-BooksAfrican Literature and Social Change Tribe, Nation, Race



African Literature and Social Change Tribe, Nation, Race
Free Download African Literature and Social Change: Tribe, Nation, Race By Olakunle George
2017 | 272 Pages | ISBN: 025302580X | PDF | 10 MB
Alert to the ways in which critical theory and imaginative literature can enrich each other, African Literature and Social Change reframes the ongoing project of African literature. Concentrating on texts that are not usually considered together--writings by little-known black missionaries, so called "black whitemen," and better-known 20th century intellectuals and creative writers--Olakunle George shows the ways in which these writings have addressed notions of ethnicity, nation, and race and how the debates need to be rehistoricized today. George presents Africa as a site of complex desires and contradictions, refashioning the way African literature is positioned within current discussions of globalism, diaspora, and postcolonialism.



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MagazineAfrican Business English Edition - April 2023



African Business English Edition - April 2023
Free Download African Business English Edition - April 2023
English | 100 pages | PDF | 101.0 MB



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E-BooksThe African Colonial State in Comparative Perspective



The African Colonial State in Comparative Perspective
Free Download The African Colonial State in Comparative Perspective By Crawford Young
1997 | 368 Pages | ISBN: 0300068794 | PDF | 20 MB
In this comprehensive and original study, a distinguished specialist and scholar of African affairs argues that the current crisis in African development can be traced directly to European colonial rule, which left the continent with a "singularly difficult legacy" that is unique in modern history.Crawford Young proposes a new conception of the state, weighing the different characteristics of earlier European empires (including those of Holland, Portugal, England, and Venice) and distilling their common qualities. He then presents a concise and wide-ranging history of colonization in Africa, from the era of construction through consolidation and decolonization. Young argues that several qualities combined to make the European colonial experience in Africa distinctive. The high number of nations competing for power around the continent and the necessity to achieve effective occupation swiftly yet make the colonies self-financing drove colonial powers toward policies of "ruthless extractive action." The persistent, virulent racism that established a distance between rulers and subjects was especially central to African colonial history.Young concludes by turning his sights to other regions of the once-colonized world, comparing the fates of former African colonies to their counterparts elsewhere. In tracing both the overarching traits and variations in African colonial states, he makes a strong case that colonialism has played a critical role in shaping the fate of this troubled continent.



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