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portada Burning the Grass: At the Heart of Change in South Africa, 1990-2011
Type
Physical Book
Year
2015
Language
English
Pages
352
Format
Paperback
Dimensions
20.6 x 13.7 x 2.5 cm
Weight
0.39 kg.
ISBN13
9781609806477

Burning the Grass: At the Heart of Change in South Africa, 1990-2011

Wojciech Jagielski (Author) · Seven Stories Press · Paperback

Burning the Grass: At the Heart of Change in South Africa, 1990-2011 - Jagielski, Wojciech ; Lloyd-Jones, Antonia

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  • Condition: New
Origin: U.S.A. (Import costs included in the price)
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Synopsis "Burning the Grass: At the Heart of Change in South Africa, 1990-2011"

In the great modern narrative nonfiction tradition of Ryszard Kapuściński, Burning the Grass is a literary masterpiece of true crime based on the April 2010 murder of Eugène Terre'Blanche, firebrand leader of the far-right AWB (Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging--the Afrikaner Resistance Movement), who espoused white Afrikaner rule even as it was ending in South Africa. It tells a universal story of small-town life where every face is familiar and people's immediate experience is hardly touched by national trends or ideologies. Jagielski intrudes on the intimate lives of the inhabitants to give us writing that jumps off the page for its immediacy, scope, and ambition. Never before has there been a book about South Africa like this. A white Afrikaner runs the Blue Crane Tavern on the outskirts of Ventersdorp that caters to blacks, a failing enterprise that he clings to obstinately. A black African is a local politician from the township of Tshing who commutes to the Town Hall in the white town as an advisor to the local government, but who is never asked for his advice. Everyone knows Eugène Terre'Blanche--for his cruelty to the workers on his farm as much as for his leadership of the AWB. The Boardman family--outcasts for being of British descent in an Afrikaner world--are at the center of Jagielski's story, a family that is ostracized almost equally by their black and white neighbors. Like Janet Malcolm in her true-crime narratives, or even Truman Capote in In Cold Blood, Jagielski uses death to enter into life, keeping our faces close enough to the pulse of it to let us smell the blood and know it as our own.

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