Iimbali zamandulo

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Active Resistance
Ancestral Beliefs
Category=NHHA
Category=NHTB
Category=NHTD
Category=NHTQ
Clashes
Colonial Authorities
Colonial Distortions
Contest for Land
Cultural Identity
Daily Life
Eastern Cape
English Translation
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Historical Events
Historical Testimonies
Iimbali zamandulo
isiXhosa
Mission Christianity
Nineteenth Century
Ordinary Lives
Ordinary People
Passive Resistance
Recollections
Resettlement
Seventeenth-century Dynastic Disputes
Social Control
Southern African Development Community
Southward Migrations
Stories of the Past
University of KwaZulu-Natal Press
Xhosa-speaking Residents

Product details

  • ISBN 9781847014566
  • Dimensions: 150 x 230mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Dec 2025
  • Publisher: James Currey
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Recollections of ordinary people, in isiXhosa and English translation, of daily life and historical events in the nineteenth century Iimbali zamandulo - 'Stories of the Past' - is a selection of historical testimonies produced by Xhosa-speaking residents of the Eastern Cape between 1838 and 1910. These narratives offer fresh insights into the history of the Xhosa-speaking peoples, providing their own perspectives on their own past. The volume contains recollections reaching back to seventeenth-century dynastic disputes, to a period preceding the southward migrations in the early nineteenth century into territories settled by Xhosa-speaking peoples. It passes on through those migrations, the clashes and resettlement of peoples and of individuals, the contest for land throughout the century, and on to the struggle for social control and the assertion of cultural identity by the century's end. To a remarkable extent, we are lent intimate access here to the lives of ordinary people, seeking better pastures for themselves, their families and their livestock; hunting, fighting and, above all, confronting personal conflict in their choices between mission Christianity and ancestral beliefs; between support for their chiefs or the colonial authorities; between active or passive resistance to encroachment on their territory; and between colonial distortions purveyed in the schools and their receding grasp of their own sustaining histories. University of KwaZulu-Natal Press: Southern African Development Community
JEFF OPLAND held appointments at the University of Cape Town, University of Durban-Westville and Rhodes University and taught at the Universities of Toronto, Yale, and Leipzig as well as Vassar College before his retirement. PETER T. MTUZE is the most prolific living isiXhosa writer: he has produced novels, short stories, essays, drama, poetry, autobiography and language books. Mtuze's first book, UDingezweni (1966), is regarded as a classic novel. One of his singular achievements was his translation of former President Nelson Mandela's autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom, into isiXhosa. He worked on the University of Fort Hare Xhosa Dictionary Project, at the University of South Africa and at Rhodes University, where he retired as Professor Emeritus.