The Cambridge History of South African Literature
Herausgeber: Attridge, Derek; Attwell, David
The Cambridge History of South African Literature
Herausgeber: Attridge, Derek; Attwell, David
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This will be the standard reference work on the history of South African literature, with unrivalled coverage of oral and written literature from the beginnings to the present. Written by a team of international experts, it offers a picture of literature in all South Africa's languages.
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This will be the standard reference work on the history of South African literature, with unrivalled coverage of oral and written literature from the beginnings to the present. Written by a team of international experts, it offers a picture of literature in all South Africa's languages.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 896
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. März 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 48mm
- Gewicht: 1290g
- ISBN-13: 9781009343787
- ISBN-10: 1009343785
- Artikelnr.: 66997026
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 896
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. März 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 48mm
- Gewicht: 1290g
- ISBN-13: 9781009343787
- ISBN-10: 1009343785
- Artikelnr.: 66997026
Introduction David Attwell and Derek Attridge; Part I. Oratures, Oral
Histories, Origins: 1. 'The Bushmen's Letters': Xam narratives of the
Bleek and Lloyd Collection and their afterlives Hedley Twidle; 2. A
contextual analysis of Xhosa iimbongi and their izibongo Russell H.
Kaschula; 3. I sing of the woes of my travels: the lifela of Lesotho
Nhlanhla Maake; 4. Praise, politics, performance: from Zulu izibongo to the
Zionists Mbongiseni Buthelezi; 5. IsiNdebele, siSwati, Northern Sotho,
Tshivenda and Xitsonga oral culture Manie Groenewald and Mokgale Makgopa;
Part II. Exploration, Early Modernity and Enlightenment at the Cape,
1488-1820: 6. Shades of Adamastor: the legacy of The Lusiads Malvern van
Wyk Smith; 7. In the archive: records of the Dutch settlement and the
contemporary novel Carli Coetzee; 8. Eighteenth-century natural history,
travel writing and South African literary historiography Ian Glenn; Part
III. Empire, Resistance and National Beginnings, 1820-1910: 9. Writing
settlement and empire: the Cape after 1820 Matthew Shum; 10. The mission
presses and the rise of black journalism Catherine Woeber; 11. The imperial
romance Laura Chrisman; 12. Perspectives on the South African War Elleke
Boehmer; 13. The beginnings of Afrikaans literature H. P. van Coller; Part
IV. Modernism and Trans-National Culture, 1910-1948: 14. Black writers and
the historical novel: 1907-1948 Bhekizizwe Peterson; 15. The Dertigers and
the plaasroman: two brief perspectives on Afrikaans literature Gerrit
Olivier; 16. New African modernity and the New African movement Ntongela
Masilela; 17. Refracted modernisms: Roy Campbell, Herbert Dhlomo, N. P. van
Wyk Louw Tony Voss; 18. The metropolitan and local: Douglas Blackburn,
Pauline Smith, William Plomer and Herman Charles Bosman Craig MacKenzie;
Part V. Apartheid and Its Aftermath, 1948-the Present: 19. The Fabulous
Fifties: short fiction in English Dorothy Driver; 20. Writing in exile
Tlhalo Raditlhalo; 21. Afrikaans literature 1948-1976 Hein Willemse; 22.
Afrikaans literature after 1976: resistances and repositionings Louise
Viljoen; 23. The liberal tradition in fiction Peter Blair; 24. Black
Consciousness poetry: writing against apartheid Thengani H. Ngwenya; 25.
Popular forms and the United Democratic Front Peter Horn; 26. Writing the
prison Daniel Roux; 27. Theatre: regulation, resistance and recovery Loren
Kruger; 28. The lyric poem during and after apartheid Dirk Klopper; 29.
Writing and publication in African languages since 1948 Christiaan
Swanepoel; 30. Writing the interregnum: literature and the demise of
apartheid Stephen Clingman; 31. Rewriting the nation Rita Barnard; 32.
Writing the city after apartheid Michael Titlestad; Part VI. South African
Literature: Continuities and Contrasts: 33. South Africa in the global
imaginary Andrew van der Vlies; 34. Confession and autobiography M. J.
Daymond and Andries Visagie; 35. 'A change of tongue': questions of
translation Leon de Kock; 36. Writing women Meg Samuelson; 37. The
'experimental line' in fiction Michael Green; 38. The book in South Africa
Peter D. McDonald; 39. Literary and cultural criticism in South Africa
David Johnson; Index.
Histories, Origins: 1. 'The Bushmen's Letters': Xam narratives of the
Bleek and Lloyd Collection and their afterlives Hedley Twidle; 2. A
contextual analysis of Xhosa iimbongi and their izibongo Russell H.
Kaschula; 3. I sing of the woes of my travels: the lifela of Lesotho
Nhlanhla Maake; 4. Praise, politics, performance: from Zulu izibongo to the
Zionists Mbongiseni Buthelezi; 5. IsiNdebele, siSwati, Northern Sotho,
Tshivenda and Xitsonga oral culture Manie Groenewald and Mokgale Makgopa;
Part II. Exploration, Early Modernity and Enlightenment at the Cape,
1488-1820: 6. Shades of Adamastor: the legacy of The Lusiads Malvern van
Wyk Smith; 7. In the archive: records of the Dutch settlement and the
contemporary novel Carli Coetzee; 8. Eighteenth-century natural history,
travel writing and South African literary historiography Ian Glenn; Part
III. Empire, Resistance and National Beginnings, 1820-1910: 9. Writing
settlement and empire: the Cape after 1820 Matthew Shum; 10. The mission
presses and the rise of black journalism Catherine Woeber; 11. The imperial
romance Laura Chrisman; 12. Perspectives on the South African War Elleke
Boehmer; 13. The beginnings of Afrikaans literature H. P. van Coller; Part
IV. Modernism and Trans-National Culture, 1910-1948: 14. Black writers and
the historical novel: 1907-1948 Bhekizizwe Peterson; 15. The Dertigers and
the plaasroman: two brief perspectives on Afrikaans literature Gerrit
Olivier; 16. New African modernity and the New African movement Ntongela
Masilela; 17. Refracted modernisms: Roy Campbell, Herbert Dhlomo, N. P. van
Wyk Louw Tony Voss; 18. The metropolitan and local: Douglas Blackburn,
Pauline Smith, William Plomer and Herman Charles Bosman Craig MacKenzie;
Part V. Apartheid and Its Aftermath, 1948-the Present: 19. The Fabulous
Fifties: short fiction in English Dorothy Driver; 20. Writing in exile
Tlhalo Raditlhalo; 21. Afrikaans literature 1948-1976 Hein Willemse; 22.
Afrikaans literature after 1976: resistances and repositionings Louise
Viljoen; 23. The liberal tradition in fiction Peter Blair; 24. Black
Consciousness poetry: writing against apartheid Thengani H. Ngwenya; 25.
Popular forms and the United Democratic Front Peter Horn; 26. Writing the
prison Daniel Roux; 27. Theatre: regulation, resistance and recovery Loren
Kruger; 28. The lyric poem during and after apartheid Dirk Klopper; 29.
Writing and publication in African languages since 1948 Christiaan
Swanepoel; 30. Writing the interregnum: literature and the demise of
apartheid Stephen Clingman; 31. Rewriting the nation Rita Barnard; 32.
Writing the city after apartheid Michael Titlestad; Part VI. South African
Literature: Continuities and Contrasts: 33. South Africa in the global
imaginary Andrew van der Vlies; 34. Confession and autobiography M. J.
Daymond and Andries Visagie; 35. 'A change of tongue': questions of
translation Leon de Kock; 36. Writing women Meg Samuelson; 37. The
'experimental line' in fiction Michael Green; 38. The book in South Africa
Peter D. McDonald; 39. Literary and cultural criticism in South Africa
David Johnson; Index.
Introduction David Attwell and Derek Attridge; Part I. Oratures, Oral
Histories, Origins: 1. 'The Bushmen's Letters': Xam narratives of the
Bleek and Lloyd Collection and their afterlives Hedley Twidle; 2. A
contextual analysis of Xhosa iimbongi and their izibongo Russell H.
Kaschula; 3. I sing of the woes of my travels: the lifela of Lesotho
Nhlanhla Maake; 4. Praise, politics, performance: from Zulu izibongo to the
Zionists Mbongiseni Buthelezi; 5. IsiNdebele, siSwati, Northern Sotho,
Tshivenda and Xitsonga oral culture Manie Groenewald and Mokgale Makgopa;
Part II. Exploration, Early Modernity and Enlightenment at the Cape,
1488-1820: 6. Shades of Adamastor: the legacy of The Lusiads Malvern van
Wyk Smith; 7. In the archive: records of the Dutch settlement and the
contemporary novel Carli Coetzee; 8. Eighteenth-century natural history,
travel writing and South African literary historiography Ian Glenn; Part
III. Empire, Resistance and National Beginnings, 1820-1910: 9. Writing
settlement and empire: the Cape after 1820 Matthew Shum; 10. The mission
presses and the rise of black journalism Catherine Woeber; 11. The imperial
romance Laura Chrisman; 12. Perspectives on the South African War Elleke
Boehmer; 13. The beginnings of Afrikaans literature H. P. van Coller; Part
IV. Modernism and Trans-National Culture, 1910-1948: 14. Black writers and
the historical novel: 1907-1948 Bhekizizwe Peterson; 15. The Dertigers and
the plaasroman: two brief perspectives on Afrikaans literature Gerrit
Olivier; 16. New African modernity and the New African movement Ntongela
Masilela; 17. Refracted modernisms: Roy Campbell, Herbert Dhlomo, N. P. van
Wyk Louw Tony Voss; 18. The metropolitan and local: Douglas Blackburn,
Pauline Smith, William Plomer and Herman Charles Bosman Craig MacKenzie;
Part V. Apartheid and Its Aftermath, 1948-the Present: 19. The Fabulous
Fifties: short fiction in English Dorothy Driver; 20. Writing in exile
Tlhalo Raditlhalo; 21. Afrikaans literature 1948-1976 Hein Willemse; 22.
Afrikaans literature after 1976: resistances and repositionings Louise
Viljoen; 23. The liberal tradition in fiction Peter Blair; 24. Black
Consciousness poetry: writing against apartheid Thengani H. Ngwenya; 25.
Popular forms and the United Democratic Front Peter Horn; 26. Writing the
prison Daniel Roux; 27. Theatre: regulation, resistance and recovery Loren
Kruger; 28. The lyric poem during and after apartheid Dirk Klopper; 29.
Writing and publication in African languages since 1948 Christiaan
Swanepoel; 30. Writing the interregnum: literature and the demise of
apartheid Stephen Clingman; 31. Rewriting the nation Rita Barnard; 32.
Writing the city after apartheid Michael Titlestad; Part VI. South African
Literature: Continuities and Contrasts: 33. South Africa in the global
imaginary Andrew van der Vlies; 34. Confession and autobiography M. J.
Daymond and Andries Visagie; 35. 'A change of tongue': questions of
translation Leon de Kock; 36. Writing women Meg Samuelson; 37. The
'experimental line' in fiction Michael Green; 38. The book in South Africa
Peter D. McDonald; 39. Literary and cultural criticism in South Africa
David Johnson; Index.
Histories, Origins: 1. 'The Bushmen's Letters': Xam narratives of the
Bleek and Lloyd Collection and their afterlives Hedley Twidle; 2. A
contextual analysis of Xhosa iimbongi and their izibongo Russell H.
Kaschula; 3. I sing of the woes of my travels: the lifela of Lesotho
Nhlanhla Maake; 4. Praise, politics, performance: from Zulu izibongo to the
Zionists Mbongiseni Buthelezi; 5. IsiNdebele, siSwati, Northern Sotho,
Tshivenda and Xitsonga oral culture Manie Groenewald and Mokgale Makgopa;
Part II. Exploration, Early Modernity and Enlightenment at the Cape,
1488-1820: 6. Shades of Adamastor: the legacy of The Lusiads Malvern van
Wyk Smith; 7. In the archive: records of the Dutch settlement and the
contemporary novel Carli Coetzee; 8. Eighteenth-century natural history,
travel writing and South African literary historiography Ian Glenn; Part
III. Empire, Resistance and National Beginnings, 1820-1910: 9. Writing
settlement and empire: the Cape after 1820 Matthew Shum; 10. The mission
presses and the rise of black journalism Catherine Woeber; 11. The imperial
romance Laura Chrisman; 12. Perspectives on the South African War Elleke
Boehmer; 13. The beginnings of Afrikaans literature H. P. van Coller; Part
IV. Modernism and Trans-National Culture, 1910-1948: 14. Black writers and
the historical novel: 1907-1948 Bhekizizwe Peterson; 15. The Dertigers and
the plaasroman: two brief perspectives on Afrikaans literature Gerrit
Olivier; 16. New African modernity and the New African movement Ntongela
Masilela; 17. Refracted modernisms: Roy Campbell, Herbert Dhlomo, N. P. van
Wyk Louw Tony Voss; 18. The metropolitan and local: Douglas Blackburn,
Pauline Smith, William Plomer and Herman Charles Bosman Craig MacKenzie;
Part V. Apartheid and Its Aftermath, 1948-the Present: 19. The Fabulous
Fifties: short fiction in English Dorothy Driver; 20. Writing in exile
Tlhalo Raditlhalo; 21. Afrikaans literature 1948-1976 Hein Willemse; 22.
Afrikaans literature after 1976: resistances and repositionings Louise
Viljoen; 23. The liberal tradition in fiction Peter Blair; 24. Black
Consciousness poetry: writing against apartheid Thengani H. Ngwenya; 25.
Popular forms and the United Democratic Front Peter Horn; 26. Writing the
prison Daniel Roux; 27. Theatre: regulation, resistance and recovery Loren
Kruger; 28. The lyric poem during and after apartheid Dirk Klopper; 29.
Writing and publication in African languages since 1948 Christiaan
Swanepoel; 30. Writing the interregnum: literature and the demise of
apartheid Stephen Clingman; 31. Rewriting the nation Rita Barnard; 32.
Writing the city after apartheid Michael Titlestad; Part VI. South African
Literature: Continuities and Contrasts: 33. South Africa in the global
imaginary Andrew van der Vlies; 34. Confession and autobiography M. J.
Daymond and Andries Visagie; 35. 'A change of tongue': questions of
translation Leon de Kock; 36. Writing women Meg Samuelson; 37. The
'experimental line' in fiction Michael Green; 38. The book in South Africa
Peter D. McDonald; 39. Literary and cultural criticism in South Africa
David Johnson; Index.