64 pages • 2 hours read
Long Walk to Freedom by Nelson Mandela (1994)
This “autobiography” of Nelson Mandela was ghostwritten by Richard Stengel (Molelekoa, Sophia. “Tladi Ditshego, Rick Stengel and the writing of Long Walk to Freedom.” Nelson Mandela Foundation, 2022). Nelson Mandela was an anti-apartheid activist and the first Black president of South Africa. This book chronicles his life, from his childhood as a young Xhosa boy, through his juvenile and young adult years, and through his almost three decades imprisoned by the apartheid government. It chronicles his history as an activist and eventually a politician. One of the most important themes toward the end of the novel is how South Africa continues to struggle with apartheid even after it’s “ending,” which is a sentiment Trevor Noah’s memoir also seems to share.
Amandla by Miriam Tlali (1980)
Tlali was the first Black South African woman to publish a novel, the semi-autobiographical Muriel at Metropolitan (alternate title: Between the Two Worlds) which, though heavily redacted by the publisher, was still banned by the apartheid government. This is her second novel, and it was also banned by the government. It focuses on the events of the 1976 Soweto Uprising, which was a series of uprisings led by Black children in protest of the mandate to learn Afrikaans, the language of their oppressors, in school.
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