Books on the topic 'Xhosa (African people) – South Africa – Cape Town'

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1

Wreford, Joanne. The pragmatics of knowledge transfer: An HIV/AIDS intervention with traditional health practitioners in South Africa. Centre for Social Science Research, 2009.

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2

Legassick, Martin. The struggle for the Eastern Cape 1800-1854: Subjugation and the roots of South African democracy. KMM Review Pub., 2010.

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3

Richard, Price. Empire and its encounters: Britain and the Xhosa peoples in Southern Africa, c. 1820-1860. Cambridge University Press, 2008.

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4

Richard, Price. Making empire: Colonial encounters and the creation of imperial rule in nineteenth-century Africa. Cambridge University Press, 2008.

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5

Thornberry, Elizabeth. Colonizing Consent: Rape and Governance in South Africa's Eastern Cape. Cambridge University Press, 2018.

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6

Colonizing Consent: Rape and Governance in South Africa's Eastern Cape. Cambridge University Press, 2019.

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7

Thornberry, Elizabeth. Colonizing Consent: Rape and Governance in South Africa's Eastern Cape. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2020.

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8

Lester, Alan. Imperial Networks: Creating Identities in Nineteenth-Century South Africa and Britain. Taylor & Francis Group, 2005.

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9

Lester, Alan. Imperial Networks: Creating Identities in Nineteenth-Century South Africa and Britain. Taylor & Francis Group, 2005.

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10

Lester, Alan. Imperial Networks: Creating Identities in Nineteenth-Century South Africa and Britain. Taylor & Francis Group, 2005.

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11

Lester, Alan. Imperial Networks: Creating Identities in Nineteenth-Century South Africa and Britain. Taylor & Francis Group, 2005.

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12

Lester, Alan. Imperial Networks: Creating Identities in Nineteenth-Century South Africa and Britain. Taylor & Francis Group, 2005.

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13

Imperial networks: Creating identities in nineteenth-century South Africa and Britain. Routledge, 2001.

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14

Pawns in a larger game: Life on the Eastern Cape frontier. Calamaish Books, 2013.

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15

The testing grounds of modern empire: The making of colonial racial order in the American Ohio country and the South African Eastern Cape, 1770s-1850s. Peter Lang, 2008.

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16

Thomas, Kylie. Impossible Mourning. Bucknell University Press, 2013. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781611489187.

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Impossible Mourning argues that while the HIV/AIDS epidemic has figured largely in public discourse in South Africa over the last ten years, particularly in debates about governance and constitutional rights post-apartheid, the experiences of people living with HIV for the most part remain invisible and the multiple losses due to AIDS have gone publicly unmourned. This profound fact is at the center of this book which explores the significance of the disavowal of AIDS-death in relation to violence, death, and mourning under apartheid. Impossible Mourning shows how in spite of the magnitude of
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