A Black South African/Zulu Woman Speaks to American Audiences in the 1920s: Sibusisiwe Makhanya 1894-1971
written by Brandy Thomas Wells, fl. 2016, in Indigenous Women's Voices in North America, American Empire, and the Global South,1820-2020: A Syllabus with Documents (Alexandria, VA: Alexander Street, 2024), 36 page(s),
Source: documents.alexanderstreet.com
Source: documents.alexanderstreet.com
Details
- Field of Interest
- Women and Social Movements
- Author
- Brandy Thomas Wells, fl. 2016
- Content Type
- Document project
- Duration
- 0 sec
- Warning: Contains explicit content
- No
- Format
- Related Web resources
- URL
- https://documents.alexanderstreet.com/c/1012873235
- Page Count
- 36
- Publication Year
- 2024
- Publisher
- Alexander Street
- Place Published / Released
- Alexandria, VA
- Subject
- Women and Social Movements, History, Women and Politics, Women and Rights, Cultural norms, Colonization, Race discrimination, Social customs, Zulu people, Lecturers, Lectures, Sudáfrica, África do Sul, Sibusisiwe Violet Makhanya, 1894-1971, South Africa, Women, Colonization, Empire, and Post Coloniality, Women of Color, Political and Human Rights, Opposition to Imperialism, Race Discrimination, Social and Cultural Rights
- Topic
- Opposition to Imperialism, Race Discrimination, Social and Cultural Rights
- Series / Program
- Indigenous Women's Voices in North America, American Empire, and the Global South,1820-2020: A Syllabus with Documents
- Keywords and Translated Subjects
- Sudáfrica, África do Sul
