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Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
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The Colour Line
Igiaba Scego; Translated by Gregory Conti, John Cullen
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R397
Discovery Miles 3 970
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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It was the middle of the nineteenth century when Lafanu Brown
audaciously decided to become an artist. In the wake of the
American Civil War, life was especially tough for Black women, but
she didn't let that stop her. The daughter of a Native American
woman and an African-Haitian man, Lafanu had the rare opportunity
to study, travel, and follow her dreams, thanks to her indomitable
spirit, but not without facing intolerance and violence. Now, in
1887, living in Rome as one of the city's most established
painters, she is ready to tell her fiance about her difficult life,
which began in a poor family forty years earlier. In 2019, an
Italian art curator of Somali origin is desperately trying to bring
to Europe her younger cousin, who is only sixteen and has already
tried to reach Italy on a long, treacherous journey. While
organizing an art exhibition that will combine the paintings of
Lafanu Brown with the artworks of young migrants, the curator
becomes more and more obsessed with the life and secrets of the
nineteenth-century painter.Weaving together these two vibrant
voices, Igiaba Scego has crafted a powerful exploration of what it
means to be "other," to be a woman, and particularly a Black woman,
in a foreign country, yesterday and today.
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Adua (Paperback)
Igiaba Scego; Translated by Jamie Richards
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R420
R353
Discovery Miles 3 530
Save R67 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Adua (Paperback)
Igiaba Scego
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R272
R222
Discovery Miles 2 220
Save R50 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Once a young girl in Somalia who wanted to be in films and escape
the domineering grasp of her father, Adua is now an "Old Lira," a
woman who immigrated to Italy during the first wave in the 1970's.
With the end of the Somalian civil war, Adua begins to seriously
consider returning to the country of her birth. Sitting at the foot
of the elephant statue that holds up the obelisk in Santa Maria
square in Rome, she recounts her story, attempting to make sense of
the past forty years and what the future might hold. When she first
arrived in Rome and her film dreams ended in failure and shame, she
knew she could not return to totalitarian Somalia and the vice-like
purview of her father. Once a translator for the Italian colonial
regime, her father's past in Italy and the rest of his life in
Somalia were characterized by attempts to live fully under the
punishing hand of regimes, while Adua was left to reckon with the
after-effects of his choices. Adua is the unforgettable story of a
father and daughter grappling with the implications of colonialism,
immigration and racism that have bisected both of their lives.
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Discovery Miles 3 940
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