Showing 481–496 of 519 results

  • Through the Darkness: A Life in Zimbabwe

    R150

    Through the Darkness: A Life In Zimbabwe is a book long anticipated. Judith Todd’s chronicle of Mugabe’s crimes against his people appals, yet the life of the subtitle has been a high-spirited crusade for justice, democracy and freedom of the press.

    Firmly attached to the progressive values of her parents Grace and Garfield Todd erstwhile prime minister of colonial Southern Rhodesia benevolent paternalists engaged in ranching, healing, teaching and politicking in south-west Zimbabwe since 1934, their daughter has proven to be cut from the same cloth.

    She was exiled in 1972 by the late Ian Smith, Zimbabwe’s last white prime minister, and stripped of her citizenship by the Mugabe government in 2003. Todd now holds New Zealand citizenship and lives in Cape Town, South Africa.

    When Todd returned to Zimbabwe from exile in Britain shortly before independence in 1980, and soon realised that, far from being the solution to Zimbabwe’s ills, Robert Mugabe and his ruling Zanu (PF) party were increasingly becoming the problem. She says when asked what she thinks went wrong in the country that “it’s almost as if Mugabe is angry he is mortal and wants everyone else to die before he does.”

    As the country slid into economic and social decline, Todd had a front-row view from her position as director of a local development agency. Over the first 25 years of Mugabe’s rule, she kept journals, notes and copies of letters and documents from which she has compiled an intensely personal account of life in Zimbabwe. These make up Through the Darkness: A Life in Zimbabwe.

    Todd’s narrative allows her to record slowly, becoming aware of how ruthlessly the party will enforce its authority and how totally it will contain and then eliminate everything that it regards as dissidence. Only by using the narrative method that she has used is Todd able to convey not only her slow disillusionment but to speak with authority about what is happening. Her authority derives from her presence, from the fact that she records nothing that she has not directly experienced.

  • Through the Looking Glass

    R300

    This book accompanied an exhibition that opened at the National Arts Festival in 2004. It considers work by a range of women artists who have represented themselves and their bodies in their work. The book is accompanied by an education supplement written by Philippa Hobbs. The educational supplement has been designed as a guide for…

  • Out of stock

    Tongues of Their Mothers

    R100

    Makhosazana Xaba’s second poetry collection is an arresting combination of challenging social commentary and intensely personal reflection.

    This poetry of everyday life, flavoured with the spice of fresh and witty observation, written with the sure hand of one who delights in the power and possibilities of words.

  • Traces and Tracks: A Thirty-year Journey with the San

    R400

    Traces and Tracks: A Thirty Year Journey with the San documents the history and life of the San in Namibia, Botswana and South Africa. It depicts Paul Weinberg’s intimate perspective on the lives of modern-day San over the past 30 years.

  • Trade Routes: Johannesburg Biennale 1997

    R750

    A catalogue of all works displayed at the Johannesburg Biennale of 1997.

  • Trevor Noah – Born a Crime and Other Stories

    R300

    Born A Crime is the story of a mischievous young boy who grows into a restless young man as he struggles to find himself in a world where he was never supposed to exist.

  • Tullula

    R250

    Tullula is a majestic bird born into royalty – the ndunas of the herd. Being a nduna means having to guard the skies at night (although it’s not entirely clear what the ndunas are guarding against). Tullula longs for something different, so she sneaks off during the day (while the rest of the ndunas are sleeping) to explore what life is like living in sunlight.

  • Two Weeks in November

    R260

    What begins as an improbable adventure destined for failure, marked by a mixture of bravery, strategic cunning and bumbling naiveté, soon turns into the most sophisticated political-military operation in African history. By virtue of their being together, the unlikely team of misfit rivals is suddenly in position to spin what might have been seen as an illegal coup into a mass popular uprising that the world – and millions of Zimbabweans – will enthusiastically support.

    Impeccably researched, deftly written, and told in the style of a political thriller, Two Weeks in November is Ocean’s 11meets Game of Thrones: a real-world life or death chess match for the future of a country where the political endgame is never a forgone conclusion.

  • Tyrone Appollis – Today and Yesterday

    R140

    Today and Yesterday is a Catalogue of an exhibition of Tyrone Appollis’ work held at the Sanlam Art Gallery, Bellville, in 2006.

  • Shorty and the Billy Boy (IsiXhosa)

    R120

    Written and illustrated in 1973 by one of South Africa’s most famous artists, Gerard Sekoto, Shorty and Billy Boy, is a book for children as well as art lovers and collectors. The manuscript forms part of a private collection of Sekoto’s sketches, artworks, letters and memoirs.

  • Under African Skies :Modern African Stories

    R220

    Spanning a wide geographical range, this collection features many of the now prominent first generation of African writers and draws attention to a new generation of writers. Powerful, intriguing and essentially non-Western, these stories will be welcome by an audience truly ready for multicultural voices.

  • Undercover With Mandela’s Spies: The Story of The Boy Who Crossed the Square

    Bradley D Steyn’s astonishing true-life thriller reveals for the first time some of the dirty secrets of a dirty war??????? within the borders of South Africa, during the dying days of apartheid.

  • Unrest – Hasan Essop and Husain Essop

    R120

    Published in 2014 by the Goodman Gallery on the occasion of the exhibition Unrest by Hasan and Husain Essop and the Standard Bank Young Artist Award for Visual Art 2014

     

  • Unsettled: The 100 Year War of Resistance by Xhosa against Boer and British

    R360

    In Unsettled, South African photographer Cedric Nunn (best known for his photographs of apartheid resistance) turns his lens to the landscape of the Eastern Cape, site of the longest and most complex anti-colonial confrontation in South Africa’s history: The 100 Year War of Resistance.

  • Visuele Kunste Graad 11 Onderwysersgids

    R250

    This comprehensive Teacher’s Guide has been approved by the DBE.

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    Vusi Khumalo: Portland Gallery 2007

    R250

    exhibition catalogue of Vusi Khumalo’s solo show at Portland Gallery, London, in 2007