As part of a growing scholarly corpus on African literature within an Indian Ocean framework, Gaurav Desai, in his recent book on writing by South Asians in East Africa, asks: “How, and under what conditions, do settlers become natives?” (13). While discussions of Indian South African writing have centered around recent novels, I take up Desai’s question in relation to earlier generations of Indian South African writing, specifically Ansuyah R. Singh’s novel, Behold the Earth Mourns, and Mohandas K. Gandhi’s Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments with Truth. I argue that these authors wanted to distance themselves from indenture and embrace a different narrative: that of the settler. They thus employ the tropes of settler writing to esc...
This dissertation examines the way in which South African colonial texts may be read for the histor...
Ph.D. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2014.This thesis examined how the perceptions of South Afr...
Bhana (2001) and Landy, Maharaj and Mainet-Valleix (2004) argue that people of Indian origin have lo...
Many were filled with hopes as high as Mahjoub's stars as they crossed the Indian Ocean, making thei...
(print) vii, 290 p. ; 24 cmIntroduction Are Indians Africans too, or : when does a subcontinental be...
A feature of the post-apartheid literary scene is the way in which the history of earlier times is b...
This dissertation investigates the ways in which East Indian Caribbean (Indo-Caribbean) writers nego...
There is an extensive literature on the experiences of Indians and Africans in colonial Natal, but a...
Colonialism makes a large set of people from South Asia migrate to Africa. People from India are use...
The purpose of the book is to engage with South African Indian writings through a critical examinati...
The focus of this thesis is to examine the effects of colonization on the development of cultural id...
The original publication is available from https://journals.co.za/journal/cultureCITATION: Cleophas...
Indian immigrants to South Africa in the late nineteenth century differed in terms of their origins...
British imperialist rulers aimed to prove the ethnic pre-eminence of their race. In response, indent...
The slave trade in Africans is perhaps the worst blot on recorded human history, given the trade\u27...
This dissertation examines the way in which South African colonial texts may be read for the histor...
Ph.D. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2014.This thesis examined how the perceptions of South Afr...
Bhana (2001) and Landy, Maharaj and Mainet-Valleix (2004) argue that people of Indian origin have lo...
Many were filled with hopes as high as Mahjoub's stars as they crossed the Indian Ocean, making thei...
(print) vii, 290 p. ; 24 cmIntroduction Are Indians Africans too, or : when does a subcontinental be...
A feature of the post-apartheid literary scene is the way in which the history of earlier times is b...
This dissertation investigates the ways in which East Indian Caribbean (Indo-Caribbean) writers nego...
There is an extensive literature on the experiences of Indians and Africans in colonial Natal, but a...
Colonialism makes a large set of people from South Asia migrate to Africa. People from India are use...
The purpose of the book is to engage with South African Indian writings through a critical examinati...
The focus of this thesis is to examine the effects of colonization on the development of cultural id...
The original publication is available from https://journals.co.za/journal/cultureCITATION: Cleophas...
Indian immigrants to South Africa in the late nineteenth century differed in terms of their origins...
British imperialist rulers aimed to prove the ethnic pre-eminence of their race. In response, indent...
The slave trade in Africans is perhaps the worst blot on recorded human history, given the trade\u27...
This dissertation examines the way in which South African colonial texts may be read for the histor...
Ph.D. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2014.This thesis examined how the perceptions of South Afr...
Bhana (2001) and Landy, Maharaj and Mainet-Valleix (2004) argue that people of Indian origin have lo...