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Overview"This is the story of how allegories of human value, cast in narrative dualities based on """"civilization"""" and """"barbarism"""", were prescribed, reified and denied in the 19th-century's struggles over human identity in South Africa. As fluid forms of subjectivity and pre-national persuasion slowly emerged into the stratifications, boundaries and principalities later to become """"South Africa"""", a battle was waged to give textual form and narrative shape to conceptions of """"proper"""" human presentation. This process, illustrating how pervasive a broad sense of textuality may have been in the settling of material destinies, coincided with the supremacy of the book and the printed text as ultimate media for resolving questions of all kinds, from the mundane to the transcendental. The book takes a view of colonialism in South Africa - missionary colonialism in particular - as a discursive process rather than """"realpolitik"""" primarily, and in so doing tells an important tale about the stories which were partly responsible for delivering South Africa into the paradoxical """"modernity"""" of segregation and apartheid." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Leon de KockPublisher: Wits University Press Imprint: Wits University Press ISBN: 9781868142989ISBN 10: 1868142981 Pages: 237 Publication Date: 01 January 1996 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Unknown Availability: Out of stock ![]() Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |