210 results on '"Dick, Archie L"'
Search Results
2. 8 Combating Censorship and Making Space for Books
3. 7 Reading in Exile after Soweto, 1978-1992
4. Notes
5. Index
6. 5 Politics and the Libraries, Part One: Book Theft, Intellectual Fraud, and Book Burning, 1950-1971
7. 6 Politics and the Libraries, Part Two: Dissident Readers and Librarians in the 1980s Townships
8. 1 Early Readers at the Cape, 1658-1800
9. 3 The Women's Building of Nations: History Books in the Early Twentieth Century
10. 4 Books for Troops in the Second World War
11. Introduction: The Significance of Common Readers in South Africa
12. List of Tables
13. List of Abbreviations
14. 2 Literacy, Class, and Regulating Reading, 1800-1850
15. Cover
16. Acknowledgments
17. Dedication
18. List of Illustrations
19. Title page, Copyright
20. Back Cover
21. Contributors
22. Index
23. 8.1 The Rise of the Surface: Emerging Questions for Reading and Criticism in South Africa
24. 8.3 The University as Publisher: Towards a History of South African University Presses
25. 8.2 Sailing a Smaller Ship: Publishing Art Books in South Africa
26. 8. New Directions
27. 7.2 “Deeply Racist, Superior and Patronising': South African Literature Education and the “Gordimer Incident'
28. 7.1 The Politics of Obscenity: Lady Chatterley’s Lover and the Apartheid State
29. 7.3 Begging the Questions: Producing Shakespeare for Post-apartheid South African Schools
30. 7. Ideological Exigencies and the Fates of Books
31. 6.3 Not Western: Race, Reading and the South African Photocomic
32. 6.2 Written Out, Writing In: Orature in the South African Literary Canon
33. 6. Orature, Image, Text
34. 5.3 From The Origin of Language to a Language of Origin: A Prologue to the Grey Collection
35. 6.1 The Image of the Book in Xhosa Oral Poetry
36. 5.1 Colin Rae’s Malaboch: The Power of the Book in the (Mis)Representation of Kgaluši Sekete Mmalebôhô
37. 5.2 “Send Your Books on Active Service': The Books for Troops Scheme during the Second World War, 1939–1945
38. 4.3 Limber: The Flexibilities of Post-Nobel Coetzee
39. 5. Questions of the Archive and the Uses of Books
40. 3.3 Oprah’s Paton, or South Africa and the Globalisation of Suffering
41. 4. Three Ways of Looking at Coetzee
42. 4.1 In (or From) the Heart of the Country: Local and Global Lives of Coetzee’s Anti-pastoral
43. 4.2 Under Local Eyes: The South African Publishing Context of J. M. Coetzee’s Foe
44. 2.3 Textual Circuits and Intimate Relations: A Community of Letters across the Indian Ocean
45. Acknowledgements
46. 2. Print Cultures and Colonial Public Spheres
47. 1.1 Print, Text and Books in South Africa
48. 3.1 Deneys Reitz and Imperial Co-option
49. 3.2 “Consequential Changes': Daphne Rooke’s Mittee in America and South Africa
50. 3. Local/Global: South African Writing and Global Imaginaries
Catalog
Books, media, physical & digital resources
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.