National Liberation and the Political Life of Exile : Sex, Gender, and Nation in the Struggle Against Apartheid
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
New African Histories
ISBN-10
0821426656
ISBN-13
9780821426654
Publisher
Ohio University Press
Imprint
Ohio University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Dec 16th, 2025
Print length
277 Pages
Product Classification:
African historyGender studies: women
Ksh 17,300.00
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The first book-length study to reveal how women in exile shaped South Africa’s antiapartheid movement This groundbreaking book explores the often-overlooked role of women in South Africa’s liberation movements, particularly within the African National Congress during its years in exile from 1960 to 1990. It examines how transformations in gender roles-though contested-were central to imagining a postapartheid South Africa. Through an analysis of women’s diplomatic work and their advocacy for policies on sexual education, birth control, family life, and childcare, Rachel Sandwell challenges traditional narratives that have ignored or minimized women’s contributions. She highlights how South African women played a crucial role in connecting exiles to left-wing international organizations like the Women’s International Democratic Federation, positioning women as key figures in global anticolonial politics. The book also explores how gender transformation was at the heart of the exiled antiapartheid movement’s vision for a free South Africa. Women fought for recognition beyond the role of “mothers of the nation,” sparking internal debates over revolutionary morality, the compatibility of motherhood with military service, and responses to sexual and domestic violence within the movement. These struggles mirrored broader ideological conflicts over nation building, belonging, and political identity as the African National Congress sought legitimacy as a government-in-exile. Ultimately, National Liberation and the Political Life of Exile asks how we write histories of revolutionary movements-especially those that, despite their transformative ambitions, did not fully realize their goals. A vital contribution to feminist history, anticolonial studies, and the history of global liberation struggles, this book reshapes our understanding of gender and politics in the antiapartheid movement.
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