In a much-acclaimed account, Jackson describes the contours and contradictions of a remarkable life and a career he describes as ‘Winston Churchill’s appointment with destiny’.
Churchill-by Ashley Jackson
KSh 700.00
In a much-acclaimed account, Jackson describes the contours and contradictions of a remarkable life and a career he describes as ‘Winston Churchill’s appointment with destiny’.
1 in stock
| SKU: | 9780857388346 |
|---|---|
| Categories: | Biographies & Memoirs, Historical Biographies, History books |
Related products
-
From the land of Pashtuns to the land of Maa
KSh 2,000.00From the Land of Pashtuns to the Land of Maa: Memoir (2013) Kenyan-born Khan traces his father’s journey from his village in India (now within Pakistan) to Kenya in 1929, alone, at the age of 18 after a family dispute.
Here is the story of migration, of Khan’s father and other Pashtuns (mainly from the Punjab Province of Pakistan), to the Maasai tribal lands in rural Kenya. His father, Juma Khan, raised 18 children from two wives: the first was a Maasai woman who assumed a Muslim name after marriage, and the second was the daughter of a Pakistani father and Maasai mother. It was a time of colonial rule when mixed marriages – and children from them – were regarded with discrimination.
-
Land, Migration and Belonging
KSh 14,560.00Tracing the history of the Basotho, a small mainly Christianised community of evangelists working for the Dutch Reformed Church, this book examines the challenges faced by minority ethnic groups in colonial Zimbabwe and how they tried to strike a balance between particularism and integration. Maintaining their own language and community farm, the Basotho used ownership of freehold land, religion and a shared history to sustain their identity. The author analyses the challenges they faced in purchasing land and in engaging with colonial administrators and missionaries, as well as the nature and impact of internal schisms within the community, and shows how their “unity in diversity”impacted on their struggles for belonging and shaped their lives. This detailed account of the experiences and strategies the Basotho deployed in interactions with the Dutch Reformed Church missionaries and colonial administrators as well as with their non-Sotho neighbours will contribute to wider debates about migration, identity and the politics of belonging, and to our understanding of African agency in the context of colonial and missionary encounters.
Published in association with the British Institute in Eastern Africa
-
The Dead Are Arising-the life of malcom x
KSh 2,195.00The Dead Are Arising is a penetrating and riveting work that affirms the centrality of Malcolm X to the African American freedom struggle and the story of the twentieth century. Renowned Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist Les Payne paints vivid and dramatic scenes from start to finish, from Malcolm’s clandestine meeting with the KKK in 1961 to a minute-by-minute account of his murder in 1965, in which Payne reveals the complicity of the American government.Payne interviewed everyone he could find who had known Malcolm X in a nearly thirty-year-long quest – including siblings, classmates, friends, cellmates, FBI moles and cops, and political leaders. Conjuring a never-before-seen world of one of the twentieth century’s most compelling figures, this magisterial work sets his life not only within the political struggles of his day but also against the larger backdrop of American history
-
How Can Man Die Better-Robert sobukwe
KSh 1,500.00Archbishop Desmond Tutu on Sobukwe: ‘I am greatly privileged to have known him and to ave fallen under his spell. His long imprisonment, restriction and early death were a major tragedy for our land and for the world.’
On 21 March 1960, Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe led a mass defiance of South Africa’s pass laws. He urged blacks to go to the nearest police station and demand arrest. Police opened fire on a peaceful crowd in the township of Sharpeville, and killed 68 people. The protest changed the course of South Africa’s history. Afrikaner rule stiffened and black resistance went underground. International opinion hardened against apartheid. Sobukwe, leader of the Pan-Africanist Congress, was jailed for three years for incitement. At the end of his sentence the government, fearful of his power, rushed through the ‘Sobukwe Clause’ to keep him in prison without trial.
For the next six years, Sobukwe was kept in solitary confinement on Robben Island, the infamous
-
The Village of Waiting
KSh 995.00Now restored to print with a new Foreword by Philip Gourevitch and an Afterword by the author, The Village of Waiting is a frank, moving, and vivid account of contemporary life in West Africa. Stationed as a Peace Corps instructor in the village of Lavié (the name means “wait a little more”) in tiny and underdeveloped Togo, George Packer reveals his own schooling at the hands of an unforgettable array of townspeople―peasants, chiefs, charlatans, children, market women, cripples, crazies, and those who, having lost or given up much of their traditional identity and fastened their hopes on “development,” find themselves trapped between the familiar repetitions of rural life and the chafing monotony of waiting for change.
-
-
Einstein His Life & Universe By: Walter Isaacson
KSh 1,695.00Einstein was a rebel and nonconformist from boyhood days, and these character traits drove both his life and his science. In this narrative, Walter Isaacson explains how his mind worked and the mysteries of the universe that he discovered.
-
History as destiny and history as knowledge
KSh 3,599.00Brief Summary
History as destiny and history as knowledge: being reflections on the problems of historicity and historiography










Be the first to review “Churchill-by Ashley Jackson”