A Soviet Journey: A Critical Annotated Edition: Critical Africana Studies
Autor Alex La Guma Editat de Christopher J. Lee Cuvânt înainte de Ngugi wa Thiong’o Prefață de Blanche La Gumaen Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 apr 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781498536028
ISBN-10: 1498536026
Pagini: 310
Ilustrații: 1 b/w illustration; 6 b/w photos
Dimensiuni: 158 x 239 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria Critical Africana Studies
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1498536026
Pagini: 310
Ilustrații: 1 b/w illustration; 6 b/w photos
Dimensiuni: 158 x 239 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria Critical Africana Studies
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Foreword by Ngugi wa Thiong'o
Preface by Blanche La Guma
Acknowledgements
A Note on Edits and Annotations
Introduction: Anti-Imperial Eyes
Prologue
Chapter One: Flashbacks
Chapter Two: The Footsteps of Alexander
Chapter Three: The Big Sky
Chapter Four: The Golden Road
Chapter Five: A Giant of Great Promise
Chapter Six: Harvest Home
Epilogue
Preface by Blanche La Guma
Acknowledgements
A Note on Edits and Annotations
Introduction: Anti-Imperial Eyes
Prologue
Chapter One: Flashbacks
Chapter Two: The Footsteps of Alexander
Chapter Three: The Big Sky
Chapter Four: The Golden Road
Chapter Five: A Giant of Great Promise
Chapter Six: Harvest Home
Epilogue
Recenzii
This critical edition of Alex La Guma's A Soviet Journey (first published in 1978) offers a key to understanding the allure of the Soviet Union during the early through mid-20th century for African and diaspora writers. Editor Lee (Lafayette College) annotates the work with Americanized grammar and punctuation and offers essential grounding in La Guma's political and creative impulses. Lee's introduction is both historically and critically comprehensive, providing sufficient context for La Guma's travel literature and political praxis. Lee suggests that La Guma's work is important because of its value as a travel account, a work of political theory, and a work of aesthetic theory. Beyond this, students and researchers unfamiliar with his work will find this edition helpful in understanding his lifelong quest for equality. La Guma (the people's writer who suffered exile) attempted to demonstrate through his Soviet travels that it is possible to create a society and political system that is anti-racist, anti-capitalist, and anti-imperial in nature. Therefore, he, like other writers from Africa and its diaspora, was seeking a philosophical space for his South Africa and other Third World countries suffering from the weight of multilevel oppression. Summing Up: Recommended. All academic levels/libraries.
The book [a re-publication of South African novelist Alex La Guma's composite 1978 memoir of several journeys to the Soviet Union in the 1960s and 1970s] is graced by Professor Christopher Lee's comprehensive introduction to the enduring ties between the Soviet Union and South African freedom struggles, and La Guma's place in this relationship. Indeed, this sixty-page introduction is worth the price of the book. Lee vividly evokes that breathless moment in the mid-twentieth century when a brand new Third World, full of anger, promise, and emancipatory vision was rising out of the ashes of colonialism. . . . For students of the Soviet Union and transnational communism in the Cold War era, La Guma's lively tale provides a valuable perspective on less-travelled Soviet byways, and the ways that officials and ordinary people alike presented themselves and their communities to an honored and enthusiastic African comrade.
The unique memoirs of an exiled African Communist and acclaimed writer during his travels in the Soviet Union-a fascinating account by a fascinating man.
Scholars and students of Africa and the Cold War owe Christopher J. Lee a debt of gratitude for rescuing from oblivion and masterfully editing this fascinating travelogue by one of the central figures of modern African literature and radical Cold War internationalism. Alex La Guma never published a memoir and this account of his Soviet travels presents us with an opening into a remarkable and remarkably eventful life of a talented globe-trotting writer, a fierce political activist, and, ultimately, a committed humanist.
It is beyond valuable to have back in print A Soviet Journey by Alex La Guma, one of South Africa's most important leftists. In this rich, descriptive account, La Guma offers a Southern perspective of the Soviet experiment. He is bedazzled by the fact that the Tsar's dominions-backward by every indicator in 1917-had thrived so fundamentally through socialist praxis. This is a marvelous book, honest in parts, hopefully idealistic elsewhere, but in all of it true to what La Guma experienced in the context of his own rich and important life.
This invaluable republication of an important yet previously neglected work by Alex La Guma fills a gap in the corpus of antiapartheid literary texts and the history of Third World internationalism. More than a simple travelogue, A Soviet Journey reveals the determining role played by the Eastern Bloc in the anticolonial imaginary. The compelling and idea-rich accompanying critical apparatus reveals the text's cultural significance. Together with the brief but luminous prefatory essays by Ngugi wa Thiong'o and Blanche La Guma, Lee's insightful introduction and meticulous annotations will become a touchstone for scholars and students of African literatures and cultures, Afro-Asian solidarities and African connections to the Eastern Bloc, as well as the global Cold War.
Who knew that novelist Alex La Guma also penned one of the greatest traveler's accounts of the last century? Set in the 1970s, A Soviet Journey captures a forgotten moment of radical possibility, when Third World guerrillas prepared to inherit the earth, when nationalists were internationalists, when the USSR backed global anti-imperialist struggles. With a prodigious introductory essay by Christopher Lee, this is a must-read for anyone interested in the global Left.
A qualitatively bounded study this may not be, but it does manage to capture the localized, human stories imbued with Marxist imagination. Edited for a new generation, this portrayal of the USSR reminds us of the enduring power of both multinationalism and communism to fascinate.
The book [a re-publication of South African novelist Alex La Guma's composite 1978 memoir of several journeys to the Soviet Union in the 1960s and 1970s] is graced by Professor Christopher Lee's comprehensive introduction to the enduring ties between the Soviet Union and South African freedom struggles, and La Guma's place in this relationship. Indeed, this sixty-page introduction is worth the price of the book. Lee vividly evokes that breathless moment in the mid-twentieth century when a brand new Third World, full of anger, promise, and emancipatory vision was rising out of the ashes of colonialism. . . . For students of the Soviet Union and transnational communism in the Cold War era, La Guma's lively tale provides a valuable perspective on less-travelled Soviet byways, and the ways that officials and ordinary people alike presented themselves and their communities to an honored and enthusiastic African comrade.
The unique memoirs of an exiled African Communist and acclaimed writer during his travels in the Soviet Union-a fascinating account by a fascinating man.
Scholars and students of Africa and the Cold War owe Christopher J. Lee a debt of gratitude for rescuing from oblivion and masterfully editing this fascinating travelogue by one of the central figures of modern African literature and radical Cold War internationalism. Alex La Guma never published a memoir and this account of his Soviet travels presents us with an opening into a remarkable and remarkably eventful life of a talented globe-trotting writer, a fierce political activist, and, ultimately, a committed humanist.
It is beyond valuable to have back in print A Soviet Journey by Alex La Guma, one of South Africa's most important leftists. In this rich, descriptive account, La Guma offers a Southern perspective of the Soviet experiment. He is bedazzled by the fact that the Tsar's dominions-backward by every indicator in 1917-had thrived so fundamentally through socialist praxis. This is a marvelous book, honest in parts, hopefully idealistic elsewhere, but in all of it true to what La Guma experienced in the context of his own rich and important life.
This invaluable republication of an important yet previously neglected work by Alex La Guma fills a gap in the corpus of antiapartheid literary texts and the history of Third World internationalism. More than a simple travelogue, A Soviet Journey reveals the determining role played by the Eastern Bloc in the anticolonial imaginary. The compelling and idea-rich accompanying critical apparatus reveals the text's cultural significance. Together with the brief but luminous prefatory essays by Ngugi wa Thiong'o and Blanche La Guma, Lee's insightful introduction and meticulous annotations will become a touchstone for scholars and students of African literatures and cultures, Afro-Asian solidarities and African connections to the Eastern Bloc, as well as the global Cold War.
Who knew that novelist Alex La Guma also penned one of the greatest traveler's accounts of the last century? Set in the 1970s, A Soviet Journey captures a forgotten moment of radical possibility, when Third World guerrillas prepared to inherit the earth, when nationalists were internationalists, when the USSR backed global anti-imperialist struggles. With a prodigious introductory essay by Christopher Lee, this is a must-read for anyone interested in the global Left.
A qualitatively bounded study this may not be, but it does manage to capture the localized, human stories imbued with Marxist imagination. Edited for a new generation, this portrayal of the USSR reminds us of the enduring power of both multinationalism and communism to fascinate.