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Who is an African?: race, identity, and destiny in post-apartheid South Africa / edited by Chammah J. Kaunda and Roderick R. Hewitt ; foreword by Marshall W. Murphree and Nobuhle Hlongwa. — 1 online resource (337 p.). — Description based upon print version of record. — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/1880388.pdf>.

Дата создания записи: 25.08.2018

Тематика: Ethnicity; Africans.; Post-apartheid era; Identity (Psychology) — Social aspects; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Discrimination & Race Relations.; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Minority Studies.

Коллекции: EBSCO

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Аннотация

This book is an in-depth conversation and study about issues of African identity in South Africa. It aims to inform policy development and change in the role of race and ethnic identity within the ""rainbow"" configuration of nation building.

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Оглавление

  • Contents
  • List of Figures
  • List of Tables
  • Foreword
  • Foreword
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction. Who Is an African?
  • Part I. RACISM, XENOPHOBIA, AND CULTURAL IDENTITY
  • Chapter 1. The Changing Salience of Race: Discrimination and Diversity in South Africa
  • Chapter 2. Cracking the Skull of Racism in South Africa Post-1994
  • Chapter 3. Black Solidarity Impaled: The Cause of Afrophobia
  • Chapter 4. Race, Place, and Indian Identities in Contemporary South Africa
  • Chapter 5. Liberating Identifications: Being Black Conscious, Being Nonracial, Being African
  • Chapter 6. Umuntu Akalahlwa: An Exploration of an African Ethics
  • Part II. GENDER, SEXUALITY, AND SOCIAL COHESION
  • Chapter 7. “I Am Born of a People Who Would Not Tolerate Oppression”: The Role of Indian Women’s Movements in Social Transformation
  • Chapter 8. Identity Construction of African Women in the Midst of Land Dispossession
  • Chapter 9. Reenacting “Destiny”: Masculinity and Afrikaner Identity in “Religious” Post-Apartheid South Africa
  • Chapter 10. “Some LGBTIQs Are More Unequal than Others”: Determinants of LGBTIQ Marginality in South Africa
  • Chapter 11. Rituals of Female Solidarity: The Role of Imbusa in Promoting Social Cohesion among Married Women in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
  • Part III. RELIGION, PROTEST, AND AFRICANNESS
  • Chapter 12. “Sing unto the LORD aNew Song” (Psalm 98:1): Aspects of the Afrikaans Punk-Rock Group Fokofpolisiekar’s Musical Spirituality as Rearticulated Aspects of the 1978 Afrikaans Psalm–en Gesangboek
  • Chapter 13. Rastafari Perspectives on African Identities: Lucky Dube’s “Different Colours /One People” in Conversation with Peter Tosh’s “I Am an African”
  • Chapter 14. On Locating Islam and African Muslim Identity within Africana/Islamica Existential Thought:A Preview
  • Chapter 15. Urban Immigrant Pentecostal Missiology: The Case of an Immigrant Zambian Pentecostal Pastor in South Africa
  • Chapter 16. Why Read the West: Messianicity and Canonicity within aPostcolonial South African Context
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Index
  • About the Editors and Contributors

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