'Somehow, Shakespeare always seems to have something to say to us.' -Nelson Mandela. The prison authorities on the apartheid South African Robben Island were obsessed with censoring the news prisoners could receive of the outside world. Through the memories and biographical accounts written by former political inmates like Nelson Mandela, the book evocatively brings to life the power of the the written word, as well as the voices of these brilliant and courageous prisoners.
'Somehow, Shakespeare always seems to have something to say to us.' -Nelson Mandela. The prison authorities on the apartheid South African Robben Island were obsessed with censoring the news prisoners could receive of the outside world. Through the memories and biographical accounts written by former political inmates like Nelson Mandela, the book evocatively brings to life the power of the the written word, as well as the voices of these brilliant and courageous prisoners.
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Sonny Venkatrathnam
– Between the bible and the bard
Mzwandile Mdingi
– The importance of an ethical education
Ahmend Kathrada
– The keeper of the books
Marcus Solomon
– The teacher who keeps learning
Sizakele Thomson Gazo
– Fighting in the present, learning for the future
Monde Colin Mkunqwana
– Opening the world througheducation
Sedick Isaacs
– A beautiful mind
Stone Phumelee Sizani
– The importance of mentors
Neville Edward Alexander
– Stop schooling, start educating
The sixth act?
References
National drive-time radio tour (Pacifica, NPR)
National radio and TV interviews (Democracy Now!)
Pitch Features in (Salon, The Nation, Hyphen Magazine)
Advertising in (The Progressive, The Nation)
Promotion targeting South African, Politics, Blogs, Solidarity
Networks
Publicity and promotion in conjunction with the author's speaking
engagements
Ashwin Desai is a professor of sociology at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa, and is a newspaper columnist. He is the author of Arise Ye Coolies and South Africa: Still Revolting and We Are the Poors: Community Struggles in Post-Apartheid South Africa.
“Ashwin Desai troubles dominant narratives about Robben Island in
this magisterial work. He offers fresh perspectives, attentiveness
to previously neglected voices, and a range of difficult questions
about the legacies of South Africa’s struggle stalwarts in the
post-Mandela era. And he’s a damned good storyteller.”
—Verne Harris, Head: Memory Programming, Nelson Mandela Centre of
Memory at the Nelson Mandela Foundation
"Reading Revolution is nothing if not a testament to the power of
the printed word to transport individuals beyond the dismal
confines of their immediate environments to a place in which the
construction of new spaces, and the forging of new futures, can be
imagined, debated, planned and realized."
—Insurgent Notes
“Besides the multiple ironies Desai uncovers and the moving and
horrifying stories, what shines through this book is the passion
for learning among the prisoners, from a simple longing to read and
write so there was no need to ask for help with precious private
letters to and from loved ones, to serious study for matric,
undergraduate and post-graduate degrees. Reading was a means of
keeping sane, as well as a means of self-improvement, and those
with knowledge taught others, often while they were working in the
quarry. There could be few better tributes to the power of the
written word.”
—The Witness
“There have been literally hundreds of books written about the
apartheid period in South Africa, both by outsiders and those who
fought and suffered under the system. Reading Revolution provides a
unique perspective on the anti-apartheid struggle and a fascinating
insight into how literature can sustain resistance and keep hope
alive, as well as fundamentally changing lives.”
—Review 31
“We owe much to Desai for bringing forward one in which reading,
imagination and political ideals could go hand in hand…. Robben
Island has simplified into legend, but Desai’s glossily illustrated
book brings the daily achievements of those prisoners to life
again. Their vision and fortitude reminds us of what is missing
from our world of patronage, cronyism, greed and corruption.”
—The Mail and Guardian
“Reading Revolution is a poignant and insightful look at the books
Robben islanders loved, in particular the plays of the Bard that
they were drawn to during their long, enforced sojourn on Robben
Island. It’s a story crying out to be made into a film…. This is a
beautifully presented, unusual and carefully crafted book and
several new and surprising facts about beloved icons are brought to
light. In doing so, Reading Revolution records a part of the
biographies of the founding fathers of the new South Africa that
will now rightly go down in posterity. It strikes an extraordinary,
utterly un-donnish and altogether beautiful note in a rather
cluttered and uneven symphony of struggle historiography.”
—Terence Pillay, Daily News
“In his typical provocative style, Ashwin Desai carefully, yet
critically presents a fresh perspective on the education of
political prisoners on the island. His book is even more relevant
today when the narrative of Robben Island, and that of the broader
struggle against apartheid, have become highly contested within the
context of building a new South Africa. He does more than just
presenting the often glorified picture of prisoners toiling in the
quarries which were also used for their education. He assists the
reader to navigate through the complicated terrain of hunger for
education during a time when education was denied to a large
section of the South African population. He shows how Robben
Island’s prisoners triumphed against adversity by using passages
from Shakespeare, an unlikely source of revolutionary political
education in the context of the struggle for liberation. I hope
this book serves as an inspiration to more writers to write about
the multi-layered history of this world-renowned island, whose
prisoners’ experiences imbued humanity with a sense of hope.”
—Sibongiseni Mkhize, chief executive of the Robben Island
Museum
“In Reading Revolution, one cannot help but thinking about the
present as one pages through the past. The struggles, the ideals,
the dreams that course through the pages somehow does not gel with
what is present day South Africa. And then one reads the final
chapter. Here Ashwin Desai vividly stitches the past into the
present. And here lies the power of the book, because its not just
another story that sees to use the history of Robben Island as a
backdrop to redemption but as a critique and spur to renewed
activism.”
—Marcus Solomon, Prisoner Number: 369/64, Robben Island
1964–1974
“Ashwin Desai’s Reading Revolution: Shakespeare on Robben Island
comes crucially at a time when textbooks and libraries are being
destroyed in South Africa. Political circumstances can inspire
reading cultures just as much as they can inhibit them,
demonstrating their contradictions. By the time that apartheid was
unravelling, political prisoners had turned Robben Island prison
into a university and a library. Many arrived as illiterates and
left as book collectors, often leaving behind some of their prized
literary possessions to fuel the reading revolution they had
started…. [Desai] weaves a compelling narrative about Shakespeare’s
reception and audiences on the island, and about reading more
generally in apartheid’s most forbidding jail.”
—Archie L. Dick, University of Pretoria
Praise for We Are the Poors
“Ashwin Desai’s We Are the Poors is one of the best books yet on
globalization and resistance. Its secret is that barely mentions
globalization, and instead weaves together richly told local
stories that bring this grand and bland subject vividly to
life.”
—Naomi Klein
“One of South Africa’s leading activist intellectuals has produced
a remarkable book detailing growing resistance to neoliberalism in
post-apartheid South Africa. Desai gives a moving picture of
desperate conditions in post-apartheid South Africa, where things
have not changed for most of the people. But this is also a
stirring account of a courageous fightback, the fight that is being
globalized as we challenge corporate globalization.”
—Dennis Brutus
Ashwin Desai troubles dominant narratives about Robben Island in
this magisterial work. He offers fresh perspectives, attentiveness
to previously neglected voices, and a range of difficult questions
about the legacies of South Africa’s struggle stalwarts in the
post-Mandela era. And he’s a damned good storyteller.”
Verne Harris, Head: Memory Programming, Nelson Mandela Centre of
Memory at the Nelson Mandela Foundation
"Reading Revolution is nothing if not a testament to the power of
the printed word to transport individuals beyond the dismal
confines of their immediate environments to a place in which the
construction of new spaces, and the forging of new futures, can be
imagined, debated, planned and realized."
Insurgent Notes
Besides the multiple ironies Desai uncovers and the moving and
horrifying stories, what shines through this book is the passion
for learning among the prisoners, from a simple longing to read and
write so there was no need to ask for help with precious private
letters to and from loved ones, to serious study for matric,
undergraduate and post-graduate degrees. Reading was a means of
keeping sane, as well as a means of self-improvement, and those
with knowledge taught others, often while they were working in the
quarry. There could be few better tributes to the power of the
written word.”
The Witness
There have been literally hundreds of books written about the
apartheid period in South Africa, both by outsiders and those who
fought and suffered under the system. Reading Revolution provides a
unique perspective on the anti-apartheid struggle and a fascinating
insight into how literature can sustain resistance and keep hope
alive, as well as fundamentally changing lives.”
Review 31
We owe much to Desai for bringing forward one in which reading,
imagination and political ideals could go hand in hand
. Robben
Island has simplified into legend, but Desai’s glossily illustrated
book brings the daily achievements of those prisoners to life
again. Their vision and fortitude reminds us of what is missing
from our world of patronage, cronyism, greed and corruption.”
The Mail and Guardian
Reading Revolution is a poignant and insightful look at the books
Robben islanders loved, in particular the plays of the Bard that
they were drawn to during their long, enforced sojourn on Robben
Island. It’s a story crying out to be made into a film
. This is a
beautifully presented, unusual and carefully crafted book and
several new and surprising facts about beloved icons are brought to
light. In doing so, Reading Revolution records a part of the
biographies of the founding fathers of the new South Africa that
will now rightly go down in posterity. It strikes an extraordinary,
utterly un-donnish and altogether beautiful note in a rather
cluttered and uneven symphony of struggle historiography.”
Terence Pillay, Daily News
In his typical provocative style, Ashwin Desai carefully, yet
critically presents a fresh perspective on the education of
political prisoners on the island. His book is even more relevant
today when the narrative of Robben Island, and that of the broader
struggle against apartheid, have become highly contested within the
context of building a new South Africa. He does more than just
presenting the often glorified picture of prisoners toiling in the
quarries which were also used for their education. He assists the
reader to navigate through the complicated terrain of hunger for
education during a time when education was denied to a large
section of the South African population. He shows how Robben
Island’s prisoners triumphed against adversity by using passages
from Shakespeare, an unlikely source of revolutionary political
education in the context of the struggle for liberation. I hope
this book serves as an inspiration to more writers to write about
the multi-layered history of this world-renowned island, whose
prisoners’ experiences imbued humanity with a sense of hope.”
Sibongiseni Mkhize, chief executive of the Robben Island
Museum
In Reading Revolution, one cannot help but thinking about the
present as one pages through the past. The struggles, the ideals,
the dreams that course through the pages somehow does not gel with
what is present day South Africa. And then one reads the final
chapter. Here Ashwin Desai vividly stitches the past into the
present. And here lies the power of the book, because its not just
another story that sees to use the history of Robben Island as a
backdrop to redemption but as a critique and spur to renewed
activism.”
Marcus Solomon, Prisoner Number: 369/64, Robben Island
19641974
Ashwin Desai’s Reading Revolution: Shakespeare on Robben Island
comes crucially at a time when textbooks and libraries are being
destroyed in South Africa. Political circumstances can inspire
reading cultures just as much as they can inhibit them,
demonstrating their contradictions. By the time that apartheid was
unravelling, political prisoners had turned Robben Island prison
into a university and a library. Many arrived as illiterates and
left as book collectors, often leaving behind some of their prized
literary possessions to fuel the reading revolution they had
started
. [Desai] weaves a compelling narrative about Shakespeare’s
reception and audiences on the island, and about reading more
generally in apartheid’s most forbidding jail.”
Archie L. Dick, University of Pretoria
Praise for We Are the Poors
Ashwin Desai’s We Are the Poors is one of the best books yet on
globalization and resistance. Its secret is that barely mentions
globalization, and instead weaves together richly told local
stories that bring this grand and bland subject vividly to
life.”
Naomi Klein
One of South Africa’s leading activist intellectuals has produced
a remarkable book detailing growing resistance to neoliberalism in
post-apartheid South Africa. Desai gives a moving picture of
desperate conditions in post-apartheid South Africa, where things
have not changed for most of the people. But this is also a
stirring account of a courageous fightback, the fight that is being
globalized as we challenge corporate globalization.”
Dennis Brutus
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