This dissertation is a study of the works of Miriam Tlali, Ellen Kuzwayo and Emma Mashinini, three Black South African Women Writers who wrote while living under the Apartheid System. The study focusses on the life narratives that are revealed in both fiction and non-fiction. The first chapter provides information showing the difiBculties involved in the writing, printing, publishing and marketing of their works. The rest of the study discusses how their texts are at the service of their communities and how the communities contribute to the individual identities developed in the writing. Black, female, selfhood needs to be retrieved from counter-history and counter-truths with special emphasis on gender issues. The study reveals that the au...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation examines the transmission of cultural value...
This article is an attempt to demonstrate the power of non-conformity with regard to literary projec...
This article is an attempt to demonstrate the power of non-conformity with regard to literary projec...
This dissertation examines the ways in which Black women writers construct the South African nation ...
The thesis discusses over a century of novel writing by South African women writers as they respon...
With the rise of nationaism, independence and the quest for a national identity, one phenomenon of p...
Bibliography: leaves 51-53.This dissertation focuses on the work of writers for whom the nature of '...
This dissertation examines the dominant images of Black women presented in the first five years of S...
Black women in South Africa have a long history of intellectualism as evidenced by their expertise a...
The canon of South African literature, as shaped by publishers, academics and past government educat...
The canon of South African literature, as shaped by publishers, academics and past government educat...
The canon of South African literature, as shaped by publishers, academics and past government educat...
The canon of South African literature, as shaped by publishers, academics and past government educat...
Includes abstract.This study examines literature by Zimbabwean women that explores evictions and mig...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation examines the transmission of cultural value...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation examines the transmission of cultural value...
This article is an attempt to demonstrate the power of non-conformity with regard to literary projec...
This article is an attempt to demonstrate the power of non-conformity with regard to literary projec...
This dissertation examines the ways in which Black women writers construct the South African nation ...
The thesis discusses over a century of novel writing by South African women writers as they respon...
With the rise of nationaism, independence and the quest for a national identity, one phenomenon of p...
Bibliography: leaves 51-53.This dissertation focuses on the work of writers for whom the nature of '...
This dissertation examines the dominant images of Black women presented in the first five years of S...
Black women in South Africa have a long history of intellectualism as evidenced by their expertise a...
The canon of South African literature, as shaped by publishers, academics and past government educat...
The canon of South African literature, as shaped by publishers, academics and past government educat...
The canon of South African literature, as shaped by publishers, academics and past government educat...
The canon of South African literature, as shaped by publishers, academics and past government educat...
Includes abstract.This study examines literature by Zimbabwean women that explores evictions and mig...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation examines the transmission of cultural value...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation examines the transmission of cultural value...
This article is an attempt to demonstrate the power of non-conformity with regard to literary projec...
This article is an attempt to demonstrate the power of non-conformity with regard to literary projec...