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Mapping an Interoceanic Landscape
by
Matsha, Rachel Matteau
in
African Christianity
/ African culture
/ African history
/ Christian missionaries
/ Indian culture
/ Nationalism
/ Ocean navigation
/ Oceans
/ Satyagraha
/ White people
2014
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Do you wish to request the book?
Mapping an Interoceanic Landscape
by
Matsha, Rachel Matteau
in
African Christianity
/ African culture
/ African history
/ Christian missionaries
/ Indian culture
/ Nationalism
/ Ocean navigation
/ Oceans
/ Satyagraha
/ White people
2014
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Journal Article
Mapping an Interoceanic Landscape
2014
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Overview
Building on existing scholarship in the field of Indian Ocean studies, this paper argues that through two major historic figures, namely John Langalibalele Dube (1871-1946) and Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948), the Indian Ocean and the Black Atlantic converged in Inanda (Durban), where notions of nation, nationalism, modernity and civilization were articulated and defined. In doing so, this paper offers a South African vantage point from which to understand the Indian and Atlantic Oceans’ role in the intellectualization of the imperial context in South Africa, as part of a set of South-South exchanges and connections. Following a brief historical overview of 20thcentury Natal, the differences, parallels and interactions between Dube and Gandhi’s personas and ideologies, and the influence of religion on their work, are discussed and supported through an examination of the Ohlange Institute and the Phoenix Settlement, as well as a comparative analysis ofIlangaandIndian Opinionarchival material, as physical and written expressions of their respective outlook on life. Finally, this case study suggests an understanding of the emergence of African and Indian nationalism and modernity in 20thcentury South Africa as a transnational phenomenon.
Publisher
Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa(ASRSA)
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