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Young Women against Apartheid - Gender, Youth and South Africa's Liberation Struggle (Hardcover)
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Young Women against Apartheid - Gender, Youth and South Africa's Liberation Struggle (Hardcover)
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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. 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
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.
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