FRIENDS OF THE NATIVES: THE INCONVENIENT PAST OF SOUTH AFRICAN LIBERALISM BY EDDY MALOKA

Authors

  • Ndumiso Dladla University of South Africa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/1812-6371/1810

References

Biko, S. (2004). I Write What I Like: A selection of his writings. Picador Africa

Marks, S. (1980). South Africa- ‘The myth of the empty land’. History Today, 30(1).

Moloka, E. (2014). Friends of the Natives: An inconvenient history of liberalism in South Africa. Durban: 3rd Millenium.

More, M.P. (2008). Biko: Africana existentialist philosopher. In A, Mngxitama, A, Alexander, & N.C. Gibson (Eds). Biko Lives! Contesting the legacies of Steve Biko (pp.45-68). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230613379_3

More, M.P. (2014). The Intellectual foundations of the Black Consciousness Movement. In P, Vale, L, Hamilton, & E.H. Prinsloo (Eds). Intellectual Traditions in South Africa: Ideas, Individuals and Institutions (pp.173-196). Pietermaritzburg: UKZN Press.

Ngubane, J.K. (1963). An African Explains Apartheid. London: Pall Mall Press.

Ntloedibe, E.L. (1995). Here is a tree: Political biography of Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe. Botswana: Century Turn Publishers.

Pheko, S.E.K. (1990). The betrayal of a colonised people: Issues of International Human Rights Law. Johannesburg: Skotaville Press.

Soske, J. (2014). The impossible concept: A genealogy of the non-racial, unpublished paper presented to the Contemporary History and Humanities Seminar Series, University of the Western Cape, 25 March.

Downloads

Published

2016-10-25

How to Cite

Dladla, Ndumiso. 2015. “FRIENDS OF THE NATIVES: THE INCONVENIENT PAST OF SOUTH AFRICAN LIBERALISM BY EDDY MALOKA”. New Voices in Psychology 11 (1):138-49. https://doi.org/10.25159/1812-6371/1810.

Issue

Section

Book Review