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In the Shadow of the Dragon's Back: A Young American Girl in South Africa During the Early Years of Apartheid
Contributor(s): Odhner, Pehr Hemming (Photographer), Polytekton (Author), Longstaff, Rachel Odhner (Author)
ISBN: 1683150112     ISBN-13: 9781683150114
Publisher: Culicidae Press
OUR PRICE:   $16.10  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: July 2017
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Women
Physical Information: 0.47" H x 5.98" W x 9.02" (0.67 lbs) 224 pages
Themes:
- Sex & Gender - Feminine
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The book is the story of a young American girl living in South Africa during the early years of apartheid (1948-1960). One of six children of a Swedenborgian minister who was sent to South Africa to establish a theological school for Africans, the author reaches back into this unique time and place in an effort to rediscover the culture that influenced her own adult attitudes. Rather than following a strictly chronological format, the story is laid out in a series of verbal snapshots, supported by photographs. Family life, experienced through the eyes of a child living in a complex environment, contrasts with the lives of those who were impacted by the institutionalized racism of apartheid. Examples of the Acts of apartheid at the end of each chapter include news articles, interviews, and commentary. Deep childhood fears of some unnamed threat are represented by home invasions, wildfires, and the cry of a hyena in the mountains. The mountains are dangerous, they present a great barrier, but they can be conquered. After returning permanently to America as a teenager-through a confusing and sometimes painful process of discussion and observation-the author uncovers those artifacts of the past that inform her place in the world today.
Review of "In the Shadow of the Dragon's Back"
Apartheid was the "Dragon's Shadow," a dragon dedicated to devouring the people in its path to establish and maintain its power. No matter how carefully parents tried to shield their children from the shadowy tentacles, they could not completely hide the effects of the growing series of draconian laws underpinning the policies of white supremacy. Nor could they protect them from the results among the increasingly oppressed people around them, from the disparity between the white beneficiaries of the laws, and the black victims hidden in the dragon's shadow. ...] Every dragon needs a St. George to slay it, a voice for the voiceless. It is a great relief, in reading descriptions of the various Apartheid laws-the shadow itself-to see flickers of light of those who stand opposed to Apartheid: the light of Nelson Mandela and his colleagues, the Black Sash, the English press, those who were banned for speaking out. ...] "In the Shadow of the Dragon's Back" deftly places these two realities side by side: the innocence of childhood and the creeping force of Apartheid, forces inimical to each other, existing in the same place at the same time. ...]
Andrew M.T. Dibb, M.Div., D.Th. Dean, Bryn Athyn College of the New Church Theological School Bryn Athyn, Pennsylvania
...a complex and engaging work that places the reader squarely inside both worlds with neither judgment nor regret.
Naomi Benaron, author of Running the Rift and winner of the Bellwether Prize for Fiction
Longstaff's] memories and musings show that the light of social justice burns brightest in the tall shadows of oppression.
Professor Archie Dick, Ph.D., Head of Department of Information Science University of Pretoria, South Africa