WINNER OF THE RHS GLADSTONE BOOK PRIZE 2022
WINNER OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE HISTORY OF CHILDREN AND YOUTH GRACE
ABBOTT BOOK PRIZE 2021
SHORTLISTED FOR THE ASAUK FAGE & OLIVER PRIZE 2022
PROVIDES A NEW PERSPECTIVE ON THE STRUGGLE AGAINST APARTHEID, AND
CONTRIBUTES TO KEY DEBATES IN SOUTH AFRICAN HISTORY, GENDER
INEQUALITY, SEXUAL VIOLENCE, AND THE LEGACIES OF THE LIBERATION
STRUGGLE.
While there have been many books on South Africa's liberation struggle
during the 1980s and early 1990s, the story of the involvement of
African girls and young women has been all but missing. This book
tells their story, analysing what life was like for African girls
under apartheid, why some chose to join the struggle, and how they
navigated the benefits and pitfalls of political activism. These were
women who, as teenagers and secondary school students,made an
unconventional choice to join student organizations, engage in public
protest, and take up arms against the state. They did so against their
parents' wishes and in contravention of societal norms that confined
girls to the home and made township streets dangerous places for
female students. They participated in both non-violent and violent
forms of political action, including attending marches and rallies,
throwing stones or petrol bombs at police, and punishing suspected
informers and other offenders, and even joining underground guerrilla
armies. Thousands of these young women were eventually detained,
interrogated, and tortured by the apartheid state. At the heart of
this book lie the life histories of the female comrades themselves,
who in interviews construct themselves as decisive actors in South
Africa's liberation struggle.
Primarily a work of oral history, this book is not only concerned with
what female comrades did, but equally with how these women remember
and narrate their time as activists: how they reconstruct their pasts;
relate their personal experiences to collective histories of the
struggle; and insert themselves into a historical narrative from which
they have been excluded. Through exploring these women's memories,
this book serves as an important corrective to South Africa's
male-centric literature on violence, and provides a new gendered
perspective on the wider histories of township politics, activism, and
conflict.
Emily Bridger is a Senior Lecturer in Global and Imperial History,
University of Exeter. A social and cultural historianof modern South
Africa, her work has been published in the Journal of Southern African
Studies, Journal of World History, and Gender & History.
Les mer
Gender, Youth and South Africa's Liberation Struggle
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781800100558
Publisert
2021
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter