Main centres: | 1-3 business days |
Regional areas: | 3-4 business days |
Remote areas: | 3-5 business days |
Published by Protea Boekhuis, 2005, softcover, index, illustrated, 318 pages, condition: new.
In Capturing the Soul. The Vhavenda and the missionaries, 1870-1900, Kirkaldy brings together much of his work on the activities of the missionaries of the Berlin Missionary Society among the Vhavenda. This book, drawing from his doctoral thesis, is largely a critical reading of the Berlin Mission records. Instead of a chronological approach, Kirkaldy has used these records to investigate a number of themes. These themes pick up various post-colonial concerns such as landscape, visual representation, the body and relationships of power, and culminate in the case study of the Mphaphuli rulers. The title is apt, in particular the second half, The Vhavenda and the missionaries, as this is not so much a history of a missionary society as it is an examination of the interaction between the Berlin missionaries and the Vhavenda. Kirkaldy's book is a contribution to the study of Venda history and throughout one is aware of his familiarity with this field. For a book that would essentially fall into the category of missionary historiography, it is noteworthy that Kirkaldy has succeeded in making the voices of both the missionaries and the Vhavenda heard. This is reinforced by the fact that the book starts with African converts and ends with an African ruler.