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Mourning becomes...

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Mourning Becomes… challenges many supposed ‘facts’ about the concentration camps established by the British military during the South African War 1899-1902.
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  • 12 June 2006
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This fascinating work challenges many of the accepted facts about the concentration camps run by the British during the South African War. The author demonstrates that much of what we have traditionally understood about these camps originates the testimony which was solicited, selected and published by key women activists within Boer proto-nationalist circles. Using detailed archival evidence, she shows that much of the history of the camps results from a deliberate imposition of ‘post/memory’ - a process by which what was ‘remembered’ was shaped and reshaped to support the development of a racialised nationalist framework.

Many of the camps’ occupants died from successive epidemics of measles, typhoid, enteritis and pneumonia rather than deliberate ill-treatment, yet the book shows how mourning for those who died was overridden by state commemorative activities concerned with promoting pan-Boer nationalist aspirations. The innovative and groundbreaking approach of the author invites the reader to step into and explore with her the commemorative sites passed by nationalist land acts, which still powerfully mark the South African landscape.

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Price: £80.00
Pages: 320
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Encounters: Cultural Histories
Publication Date: 12 June 2006
ISBN: 9780719065682
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

HISTORY / Africa / South / General, Traditional and folk music, HISTORY / Military / Wars & Conflicts (Other), African history

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Acknowledgements
Remembering
1. ‘The Brunt of the War & Where It Fell’
2. Small personal reminiscences concerning large human issues
3. A secret history of kept secrets: local mourning & state commemoration
4. Making memory work: remembering, moral life & the concentration system
5. ‘Should We Forget?’ Some answers from women’s testimonies
6. What has been forgotten, concerning children in the ‘white’ camps
7. Nooitgedacht: black people in the concentration system
8. Onthou! Commemoration & the legendary topography
9. For Electra, peace, of a kind
Bibliography