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Frontiers, The epic of SAs creation & the tragedy of the Xhosa People, by Noel Mostert
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Frontiers, The epic of SAs creation & the tragedy of the Xhosa People, by Noel Mostert

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Product details

Condition
Secondhand
Location
South Africa
Customer ratings:
Product code
0679401369
Bob Shop ID
125533542

Frontiers by Noel Mostert

  • Paperback: 1355 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; First American Edition edition (1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679401369
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679401360
  • CONDITION: Very good, tight binding, pages clean & unmarked, minor wear/markings on page edges

 This book masterfully reinterprets the founding era of South Africa, especially the 19th century, to emphasize not the Afrikaners but the conflict between British colonials and the indigenous Xhosa people. Drawing on virtually forgotten government records and vivifying little-known people, Mostert ( Supership ) has done for South Africa what Robert Hughes did for Australia in The Fatal Shore . Mostert places South Africa in the framework, both geographical and moral, of world colonial expansion; Britain's Cape Colony, site of an experiment in political liberalism, illustrates the era's tension "between high-minded conscience and self-interest." To reconstruct this "crucible of modern South African society," the author conjures up multiple worlds in passages often intricate and lyrical, though the depth of detail may deter readers. He draws on historiography, geography, linguistics and archeology to portray the European scramble for Africa, the cosmology of the indigenous Bushmen and the lives of the Afrikaners and the Zulus but eventually focuses on the British settlers and the Cape Xhosas, a proud people with traditions of democratic debate, communal land and welcoming of strangers. Their interactions animate a narrative rich in drama: the British began "probably the most callous act of mass settlement in the entire history of empire"; the Cape was the first society to attempt to legislate an interracial state; and when the Xhosas, decimated by the frontier wars and vulnerable to prophecy, killed their cattle and thus many of themselves, it was "probably the greatest self-inflicted immolation of a people in all history." Mostert concludes that the Cape Colony, where the nonracial franchise continued to contract until it vanished under 20th-century apartheid, "represents one of the greatest of lost ideals within human society." Photos not seen by PW . BOMC, History Book Club and QPB alternates.

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07 Jan 2014