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An introduction to the lives and works of five exceptional African intellectuals based in the former Cape Colony in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, this unique work aims to recount and preserve a part of African intellectual heritage which is not widely known. Ntsikana, Tiyo Soga, John Tengo Jabavu, Mpilo Walter Benson Rubusana and Samuel Edward Krune Mqhayi were pioneers within the African community, contributing their thoughts and intellect to various fields, including literature and poetry, politics, religion and journalism.

148mm x 210mm (Soft Cover)

An African Peace Process
Mandela, South Africa and Burundi
Kristina A. Bentley, Roger Southall

This monograph outlines the origins and nature of the conflict in Burundi. It discusses the problems of establishing democracy in a region where ethnic conflict has occasioned genocide, traces the peace process in detail and assesses the prospects for the future. In aprticular, it looks at the role played by South Africa in the peace process since 1999.

210mm x 148mm (Soft Cover)

Behind the Mask
Getting to grips with crime and violence in South Africa
Tony Emmett, Alex Butchart (eds)

A variety of authors contribute to this book on the causes of crime and violence in South Africa. Based on a public health approach, it presents strategic case studies and local and international research findings. The writers develop a model of integrated crime and injury prevention strategies for South Africa.

210mm x 150mm (Soft Cover)

The Deaths of Hintsa
Postapartheid South Africa and the shape of recurring pasts
Premesh Lalu

In 1996, as South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission was beginning its hearings, Nicholas Gcaleka, a healer diviner from the town of Butterworth in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa, set off on a journey to retrieve the skull of Hintsa, the Xhosa king. Hintsa had been killed by British troops on the banks of the Nqabarha River over a century and a half before and, it was widely believed, been beheaded. From a variety of quarters including the press, academia and Xhosa traditional leadership Gcaleka’s mission was mocked and derided.

198mm x 148mm (Soft Cover)

including VAT (14%)

Two years into the transition to democratic rule in South Africa, a little-known healer-diviner, Nicholas Tilana Gcaleka, stumbled onto the stage of history. He claimed to have brought the skull of Xhosa king Hintsa back to South Africa from Scotland, where he said he had traced it. Amidst a flurry of media attention, the skull was confiscated from Gcaleka and handed to a team of scientists to �prove� its authenticity. They declared the cranium was that of a human female, and definitely not Hintsa. Gcaleka was proclaimed, at least, laughable, and at worst, a liar. This event therefore poses the question: is South African history developing an authentic new discourse or is it stuck in the colonial archive? Through mining a rich field of research, from colonial archival material to contemporary museum exhibitions, Lalu states in his book ‘The Deaths of Hintsa: Postapartheid South Africa and the shape of recurring pasts ‘ that overcoming apartheid has required coming to terms not only with the effects of history, but with the discourse of history itself. Hear the views of Professor Lalu, along with those of historians Leslie Witz and Ciraj Rassool, in this podcast.

Duration: 9 min 10 sec

Education in Exile
SOMAFCO, the ANC school in Tanzania, 1978 to 1992
Se�n Morrow. Brown Maaba, Loyiso Pulumani

This co-authored book re-lives the experiences of young South African exiles at the Solomon Mahlangu Freedom College (SOMAFCO) in Tanzania. South Africans from all backgrounds and solidarity workers from many parts of the world showed what new ways of thinking about teaching and learning could achieve.

Ruth First
Voices of Liberation
Don Pinnock

The struggle to free South Africa from its apartheid shackles was long and complex. One of the many ways in which the apartheid regime maintained its stranglehold in South Africa was through controlling the freedom of speech and the flow of information, in an effort to silence the voices of those who opposed it. United by the ideals of freedom and equality, but also nuanced by a wide variety of persuasions, the �voices of liberation� were many: African nationalists, communists, trade-unionists, pan-Africanists, English liberals, human rights activists, Christians, Hindus, Muslims and Jews, to name but a few.

148mm x 210mm (Soft Cover)

Gender, modernity & Indian delights
The Women�s Cultural Group of Durban, 1954�2010
Goolam Vahed, Thembisa Waetjen

For decades, South Africans aspiring to make the perfect biryani have turned to Indian Delights. the best selling cookbook produced by Zuleikha Mayat and the Women´s Cultural Group. This is the story of the women behind the recipes; it is an account that brings to life the changing, gendered worlds of Muslim women in 20 th century Durban.

148mm x 210mm (Soft Cover)

Growing up in Canaansland
Children’s recommendations on improving a squatter camp environment
Jill Swart-Kruger (ed)

This ground-breaking report exemplifies practical methods for working with children to improve community environment. The researcher collected and collated data from childen living in a South African squatter camp and the report highlights their experinces and suggestions for improving their urban environment.

including VAT (14%)

Growing up in the new South Africa
Childhood and adolescence in post-apartheid Cape Town
Rachel Bray, Imke Gooskens, Sue Moses, Lauren Kahn, Jeremy Seekings

How has the end of apartheid affected the experiences of South African children and adolescents? This pioneering study provides a compelling account of the realities of everyday life for the first generation of children and adolescents growing up in a democratic South Africa. The authors examine the lives of young people across historically divided communities at home, in the neighbourhoods where they live, and at school. The picture that emerges is one of both diversity and similarity as young people navigate their way through a complex landscape that is unevenly �post�-apartheid. Historically and culturally rooted, their identities are forged in response to their perceptions of social redress and to anxieties about �others� living on the margins of their daily lives. Although society has changed in profound ways, many features of the apartheid era persist: material inequalities and poverty continue to shape everyday life; race and class continue to define neighbourhoods, and �integration� is a sought-after but limited experience for the young.

168mm x 240mm (Soft Cover)

Growing Up in the New South Africa: Childhood and Adolescence in Post-Apartheid Cape Town is about the realities of life for children and adolescents in South Africa in the first decade after the end of apartheid. The book is based on extensive research in the southern periphery of Cape Town � in the diverse communities of Masiphumelele, Ocean View and Fish Hoek. Co-authors, Rachel Bray and Jeremy Seekings, explain the choice of site and the value of combining a qualitative and quantitative approach to understanding the life experiences of children in this microcosm of South Africa.

Duration: 2 mins 34 sec

Nation-building and the politics of identity in post-apartheid South Africa is the focus of this collaborative publication. This book is the first of three companion volumes in a series that examines the role of ethnicity, religion, gender and language in forming national identity and strengthening democracy.

Baba
Men and Fatherhood in South Africa
Linda Richter, Robert Morrell (eds)

Baba: Men and Fatherhood in South Africa provides answers to some of the most difficult questions about fatherhood in South Africa: Who is a father? What does it mean to be a father? Is it important for fathers to do more for children in a world that assumes that mothers take the primary parenting role? Do different people understand fatherhood in different ways? What evidence is there of new fatherhood styles emerging in South Africa?

240mm x 168mm (Soft Cover)

including VAT (14%)

The country we want to live in
Hate crimes and homophobia in the lives of black lesbian South Africans
Nonhlanhla Mkhize, Jane Bennett, Vasu Reddy, Relebohile Moletsane

The country we want to live in: Hate crimes and homophobia in the lives of black lesbian South Africans offers a refreshing perspective on violence perpetrated against black lesbians. Based on a Roundtable seminar, held during the 2006 16 Days of Activism for no Violence against Women and Children, the text engages the heteronormative focus of the campaign, profiles aspects of the dynamic conversations, and builds strong arguments about violence against lesbians. It also profiles the voices of women who are central to the activism around hate crimes and homophobia. In capturing key aspects of the lively discussion of 2006, an update of subsequent events that have bearing on the original seminar is provided, concluding with recommendations that have relevance for research, policy and practice. The country we want to live in makes an impassioned plea about citizenship, belonging and social justice, confirming that silence about these issues is not an option.

148mm x 210mm (Soft Cover)

Men’s Pathways to Parenthood
Silence and heterosexual gendered norms
Tracy Morison, Catriona Macleod

How does the decision to become a parent unfold for heterosexual men? Is becoming a father a ‘decision’ at all or a series of events? These questions are the starting point for this critical book, in which the authors unravel the social and interpersonal processes � shaped by deeply entrenched socio-cultural norms � that come to bear on parenthood decision-making in the South African context.

168mm x 240mm (Hard Cover)

The Prize and the Price
Shaping sexualities in South Africa
Melissa Steyn, Mikki van Zyl (eds)

What is the Prize, and who pays the Price? The desired and the desirable are often constellated through our ideas of what is undesired and undesirable, deeply knotted into our sense of self, our sense of where and how we fit into the world. These notions of desire form the backdrop to this powerful volume which examines the historical continuities and interruptions of heteronormativity in South African society.

168mm x 240mm (Soft Cover)

From Social Silence to Social Science
Same-sex sexuality, HIV & AIDS and Gender in South Africa
Vasu Reddy, Theo Sandfort & Laetitia Rispel (eds)

This book presents a unique and innovative effort to examine what we know about homosexual transmission of HIV and AIDS in South Africa. It reverses the trend whereby categories of same sex sexual practice are almost always excluded from research of HIV and AIDS, as well as from care and intervention programmes. The varied contributors (academics, activists and programme planners) draw attention to the risk behaviours and treatment needs of people who engage in homosexual sex, and explain why same-sex sexuality has to be seen as key within South African efforts to study, test and prevent HIV infection. Relevant to scholarly debates about HIV and AIDS, it is also essential reading for anyone involved in research, policymaking, advocacy and community development.

168mm x 240mm (Soft Cover)

There are large gaps and silences in academic literature, public understanding, and health promotion strategies when it comes to addressing the needs of South Africans who are involved in same-sex relationships. Award-winning political journalist Christi van der Westhuizen chaired a panel at the Cape Town Book Fair 2009 of contributors to this HSRC Press publication. Here she introduces some of the issues tackled in the book and its co-editor, Professor Vasu Reddy.

Duration: 4 min 53 sec

South African Women as Champions of Change
Margaret Chitiga-Mabugu, Selma Karuaihe, Vasu Reddy,Shirin Motala, Tracy Morison, Hannah Botsis, MiracleNtuli and Nthabiseng Tsoanamatsie

The publication of this book forms part of a civil society programme of action for the African Women�s Decade, co-ordinated by South African Women in Dialogue (SAWID). It reports on the main issues facing South African women, namely: 1) poverty eradication in the context of gender; 2) early childhood development (ECD) in the context of gender; 3) violence against women; and 4) co-ordination of civil society initiatives. A fifth theme which cuts across all the others is employment creation.

The innovative methodology adopted with the incorporation of social networks as a research tool and the research assistance and voices of the teenage fathers within this study, is discussed in this final part of the five part podcast package. Dr Sharlene Swartz discusses issues of culture, hierarchies and communities within the context of teenage fathers in South Africa.

Duration: 4 min 51 sec

Was it something I wore?
Dress � Identity � Materiality
Relebohile Moletsane, Claudia Mitchell, Ann Smith

People often wear their causes on their t-shirts, in their choice of traditional attire or other garments, or by way of specific costumes, pieces of jewellery or particular accessories. In Was it something I wore? Dress; identity; materiality. the contributors explore the construction and performance of personal and social identities. The essays point to the significance of dress as material culture in social science research not only in their content but also in their focus on a variety of methodologies including memory work, visual studies, autoethnography, object biographies and other forms of textual analysis.

168mm x 235mm (Soft Cover)

Women’s Property Rights, HIV and AIDS & Domestic Violence
Research Findings from Two Districts in South Africa and Uganda
Hema Swaminathan, Cherryl Walker, Margaret A. Rugadya (eds)

Women’s property and inheritance rights are recognised in international law and in a growing number of countries worldwide, yet women in many developing countries do not have the right to own or inherit property. At the same time, women are increasingly heading up households and are in critical need of land and property for economic security, particularly in the context of the AIDS epidemic – in fact, secure property rights are believed to be a factor in reducing women’s risk of contracting HIV and in protecting them from domestic violence.

210mm x 280mm (Soft Cover)

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