The Communist Party in South Africa: Racism, Eurocentricity and Moscow, 1921-1950

The Communist Party in South Africa: Racism, Eurocentricity and Moscow, 1921-1950

by Mia Roth
The Communist Party in South Africa: Racism, Eurocentricity and Moscow, 1921-1950

The Communist Party in South Africa: Racism, Eurocentricity and Moscow, 1921-1950

by Mia Roth

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Overview

Why is the history of communism in a country at the bottom of the African continent still important enough to warrant this book? South Africa is one of the few countries in the world that still has a strong communist party whose views are not only taken into account by the government, but whose members hold important positions in both the cabinet and in government offices. This is the first account of the history of the Communist Party of South Africa based on archival sources. The initial accounts were written by party members and had very little to do with reality. The months that Mia Roth spent in the newly opened Russian and South African Archives in 1998 and the number of years she spent in writing it, revealed to her not only the racism in the South African party but also the role it played in destroying the ICU, the only genuine African mass movement of that time. Its depiction of the part played by African communists was only a facade.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781482809640
Publisher: Partridge Publishing Africa
Publication date: 01/20/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 341 KB

About the Author

Mia Roth was a history professor at an African University in Johannesburg, South Africa. She founded five literacy resources centres in urban African townships. After her retirement she followed her children to Australia and has written two more books. The first “Uberleben Durch Vergessen: Die judische Geliebte, der Retter von der Gestapo und die kleine Zeugin” (Heidelberg, Carl Auer Verlag, 2015), only published in German at present, is based on her recollections as a Holocaust survivor. The second, based on her doctoral studies is “The Rhetorical Origins of Apartheid: How the Debates of the Natives Representative Council shaped South Africa’s Racial Policies”, (McFarland, Jefferson, 2015).
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