The South African Gandhi
- 343pages
- 13 heures de lecture
Ashwin Desai est un sociologue et militant prolifique dont le travail explore en profondeur les questions sociales. Il apporte une perspective unique à son écriture, nourrie par sa formation académique et ses engagements militants. Sa prose se caractérise par un regard analytique aiguisé sur les structures et les dynamiques sociétales. Desai s'efforce de stimuler la discussion et la compréhension des phénomènes sociaux complexes à travers sa production littéraire.



In this searing and revealing account of cricket in post-apartheid South Africa, Ashwin Desai deftly tells a story of promise and despair, the story of a new pitch; a quick start full of hope, followed by a steady erosion of the commitments needed to fulfil the promise of a level-playing field. Economic and political compromises contributed to holding back the pulling aside of the covers of race and class privilege. Alongside this, the hurried hollowing out of the 'politics of cricket', aided by black administrators assuming the accoutrements of office, saw very little internal challenge to the lack of transformation. In a book where the love of cricket shines through, Ashwin Desai makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the farce that was post-apartheid cricket administration and the characters that played such a role in the charade.
Many were filled with hopes as high as Mahjoub's stars as they crossed the kala pani (the sea) making their way from India to Durban in southern Africa in the late 1800s. But dreams of a better life were not to be for many who returned 'home'. This title helps us in understanding South African Indian history.