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‘Magic Negro’, Saint or Comrade: Representations of Nelson Mandela in Film
“In the late 1980s, Nelson Mandela stood alone against the apartheid state.” This comment taken from the DVD Box set cover of Nelson Mandela: From Freedom to History summarises the approach taken by many of the cinematic and televisual representations of
Roger Bromley
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A life of refusal. Winnie Madikizela-Mandela and violence in South Africa
Winnie Madikizela-Mandela is an iconic woman in South African resistance politics. Not only the wife of Nelson Mandela, she was also a member of the ANC’s armed wing and supported the use of political violence. In the mid-1980s, she was implicated in the
Shireen Hassim
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Political apathy amongst students: A case study of Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
The primary motivation for this research, in which a qualitative method was employed, was to examine political apathy amongst students at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University.
Ntsikelelo B. Breakfast +2 more
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Disquisiciones sobre el (neo) liberalismo en el mundo contemporáneo
Miguel Ángel Rossi | Ricard, Laleff Ilieff (comp.) Buenos Aires, Ed.
Mandela Muniagurria
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South African foreign policy deserves, in these times of the fall of the new world order, to be re-examined, as does all the continent's diplomacy, in the light of a quantum revisionism, id.est, of the power games that clashed between the deep state and ...
Thibaut Dubarry
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Nelson Mandela’s ‘Ordinary Love’ Addressed in Pop-rock Music: a Long Song of Freedom
This paper aims to highlight how inspirational the figure of Nelson Mandela has been for several musicians and songwriters. In particular, it focuses on songs written by Western musicians from the early Eighties until 2013 – all showing the extent to ...
Simona Martini
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Dr Siyabulela Mandela: Global Youth Activism
Dr. Siyabulela Mandela, the great-grandson of Nelson Mandela, will be at the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John’s University from March 20 to April 20 through a residency sponsored by The Eugene J.
Mandela, Siyabulela
core
In 1994, in his first speech to the parliament of South Africa, Nelson Mandela quoted the Afrikaner poet Ingrid Jonker and read The child who was shot dead by soldiers at Nyanga.
Maria Paola Guarducci
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