The complexities of South Africa are illuminated upon in this acclaimed work that takes a close, clear look at the strange realities within that country.
Joseph Lelyveld was executive editor of The New York Times from 1994 to 2001, and interim executive editor in 2003 after the resignation of Howell Raines. He is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author, and a frequent contributor to the New York Review of Books.
Inevitably now very dated as a study of South Africa, but a magnificent account of how it appeared to a liberal foreign journalist in the mid 1980s. Lelyveld doesn't shy away from the brutalities of apartheid, but where he really excels is in demonstrating its absurdities. He often achieves a bitter humor in detailing the tortured logic wherewith the government and individual white South Africans justified the racial status quo.
Yayımlandığı yıl Pulitzer Ödülü'nü kazanmış bir gazetecilik çalışması. 1980'lerin ilk yarısında Güney Afrika'daki 'apartheid' rejimini anlatıyor.
Kitabın yer yer parlayan, notlar aldıran yerleri var elbette. Rejimin yöneticilerinin dünyaya nasıl baktıklarını yorum bile yapmadan, yalnızca onların sözlerini alıntılayarak gösteren yerler. ABD'li politikacıların çok değil, 10 yıl sonra kurulacak yeni rejimi haber veren, 'bu ülkeye bir çok-ırklı oligarşi lazım' dediklerini öğrenince sarsılıyorsunuz. Bizi işlerinden 100-150 kilometre uzakta yaşamaya zorlanan, bazen günde 6 saatini yollarda geçiren siyah işçilerin otobüsüne götürüyor kitap, 70 yıldır silahlı mücadele veren ama bir tür kitleselleşemeyen ANC'nin melankolisini anlattığı yerler etkileyici.
Bazı kitaplar iyi yaşlanır. Yazıldıktan on yıllar sonra da ilgiyle okunur. Bu kitap onlardan biri değil fakat. Bahsettiğim tüm kayda değer yerler, 400 sayfalık kitabın belki 80 sayfalık bölümüdür. Geriye kalan yerler 32 yıl içinde hızla yaşlanmış, Güney Afrika'yı yürekten bilmeyen okur için kitabı ilgi çekici olmaktan çıkaran ayrıntılarla dolmuş.
i liked this. another book about the south africa that i have read recently which was similar to rian malans my traitors heart but this time the journalist is american. the story right on the last 2 pages was very poignant i thought where an africaner takes his 2 young sons (15 and 13 ish i think) to see a group of blacks who were slaightered by other black - not to rub it in about how vicious blacks can be at the time but to make them realise the gravity of the situation. the book isa bit slow itn eht first third but really kicks in after that. especially at the point when it talks abotu the tortures taht were taking place - some in quite a bit of detail. teh book was deeply philosophical at times and offers soem really interesting insights into the black and at times white psyche ""afrikaners were not racist, tey were just revolted by the way some blacks spit and sneez in public. when black manners improved so would the willingness of whites to seek political acmodation". incredible.
This is the story of apartheid in South Africa, as told by a white, American, New York Times journalist. This is harrowing stuff, worse than we imagined it way back when this was written, in 1985. I think it was timely then, but is still very much a must read for right now. I thought, at first, that maybe Lelyveld wasn't the right writer to do a book on South Africa. This Non-Fiction Pulitzer Prize winning story had to get out so the world knew what was happening. If a white American had to tell the world through the New York Times, so be it. I am going to do some research and read a Black South African authors version of the events. They were in situations and places Lelyveld could witness, but never live it.
I read this about 21 years ago while studying for the Foreign Service Officers' exam. I found it useful for my purposes. Th is was also a time when there was a lot of focus on South Africa: the Sun City album by Artists United Against Apartheid; films like The Gods Must Be Crazy and Cry, The Beloved Country.
This was recommended by John Carlin as one of five books to understand apartheid South Africa. I read it after a recent visit, this book written in 1986 gave me deep insights into the incongruities I observed in racial relationships in the country. It is a masterpiece of journalism, a product of three years of lived experience and a reminder of what good journalism can do. Lelyveld breaks it down into twelve chapters, each exploring a concept or practice that oiled the apartheid machine. He reveals the ordeals suffered by Blacks under a meticulously planned state operated system, and the mindless justification those in power offered their own conscience. He also offers self reflections of the liberal who has only his observations to offer and no power to influence change. This book remains relevant today to understand the segregated communities in South Africa and the explanation one receives depending on the narrator. It is an appeal to understand our shared humanity across the racial and political divide.
Pulitzer Winner for General Nonfiction, 1986. This is a good book but dated as you can imagine. The main reason I subtracted stars was that the characters were not compelling. I read ABOUT many people but I didn’t get to know them. What the book does right: the author does a great job of outlining the legal and physical logistics of subverting the black population. He outlines how black South Africans constantly lived on a razor’s edge where a simple thing like missing a bus could lead to the break up of a family. The book naturally raises questions about how US society accomplishes the same ends of de facto segregation and the diversion of human potential.
A devastating, and devastatingly detailed, account of how South African apartheid policy worked in 1985. Joseph Lelyveld canvasses the forces great and small that originated and perpetuated this policy. On one hand, Lelyveld recounts the history, ideology and politics which incubated the apartheid policy. At the same time, Lelyveld gives detailed portraits of individual lives--and how apartheid impacted their daily lives. An impressive volume.
Knew very little about Apartheid South Africa going in. After finishing this book, I felt incredibly informed and was making connections from Apartheid South Africa to modern apartheid states today. Though written before the fall of the White South African government, and is thus dated, the book didn't feel dated and still a valuable read and intro into the politics of South Africa.
I've read a lot of books, mostly fiction, concerning apartheid and thought that I could not be amazed anymore. Boy, was I wrong. Among other things it shows the concept of apartheid through the eyes of Afrikaners, and it is still shocking. Some of them truly believed they were doing the black man a favor! It is a tough read though, lots and lots of dates and events.
An excellent first hand account from a white journalist of the apartheid era. Written during the later stages of apartheid, but before the end. Touches many of the characters that are now in power in SA.
This is one of the ten best books I've read this year. It won the 1985 Pulitzer Prize for Non Fiction. The book gives a detailed account of how apartheid in South Africa has affected the whole country. I'm sorry it's taken me thnis long to read it.