Results for 'Johannesburg'

89 found
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  1.  13
    Wrapping Johannesburg: A boxing story.James Sey & Christine Dixie - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 141 (1):86-102.
    This paper takes the form of a ‘performative’ dialogue, a recounting of scenes, which alternate, in the mode of a cinematic montage, with academic analysis of the interfaces between boxing, art, and space. In his book Body and Soul: Notebooks on an Apprentice Boxer, sociologist Loïc Wacquant mixes three genres: analytic sociology, depictive ethnography, and short story. He argues that he used this unorthodox methodology ‘to make the reader simultaneously feel and understand how boxers are “gripped” by their craft and (...)
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  2.  14
    Johannesburg: Colonial anchor, African performer.Peter Vale & Noëleen Murray - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 141 (1):3-13.
    This journal article reflects on the conceptualization of a three-day meeting convened to open space for thinking differently about the city of Johannesburg, South Africa, and to begin to explore the possibility of working beyond the constraints of standard urban studies and regimes of spatial planning through which the city is conventionally viewed and researched. The incentive underpinning the 2015 Performative Urbanisms workshop was the desire to find areas of correspondence and overlap in the often widely separated realms of (...)
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  3.  6
    Writing Johannesburg.Naomi Roux - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 141 (1):115-122.
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  4.  2
    Johannesburg, Kyoto, and the Need for Knowledge Infrastructure Renewal.Bill Vanderburg - 2002 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 22 (6):419-425.
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  5.  6
    Writing Johannesburg[REVIEW]Naomi Roux - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 141 (1):115-122.
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  6.  3
    Writing Johannesburg[REVIEW]Naomi Roux - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 141 (1):115-122.
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  7.  9
    Writing JohannesburgAsmalZahiraTrangoGuyš Movement Johannesburg DechmannNeleJaggiFabianMurbachKatrinRuffoNicola with photographs by Mpho Mokgadi Up Up: Stories of Johannesburg’s Highrises BrodieNechamaThe Joburg Book: A Guide to the City’s History, People and Places KurganTerryHotel Yeoville.Naomi Roux - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 141 (1):115-122.
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  8. World, Class, Tragicomedy: Johannesburg, 1994.Liam Kruger - 2023 - College Literature 50 (2-3):349-382.
    Marlene van Niekerk's 1994 Triomf is a plaasroman, or farm novel, without the farm; it formally resembles a nostalgic pastoral genre initiated by the collapse of Southern African agricultural economy around the time of the Great Depression, but removes even the symbol of the farm as aesthetic compensation for material loss. In the process, van Niekerk composes a post-apartheid tragicomedy of a lumpenproletariat white supremacist family coming into long-belated class consciousness, an epiphany which, surprisingly, survives the novel's translations from Afrikaans (...)
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  9. Anglicans in Johannesburg: A divided church in search of integrity.Peter Lee - 2001 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 18 (4):232-246.
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  10.  27
    Needs must: living donor liver transplantation from an HIV-positive mother to her HIV-negative child in Johannesburg, South Africa.Harriet Rosanne Etheredge, June Fabian, Mary Duncan, Francesca Conradie, Caroline Tiemessen & Jean Botha - 2019 - Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (5):287-290.
    The world’s first living donor liver transplant from an HIV-positive mother to her HIV-negative child, performed by our team in Johannesburg, South Africa in 2017, was necessitated by disease profile and health system challenges. In our country, we have a major shortage of donor organs, which compels us to consider innovative solutions to save lives. Simultaneously, the transition of the HIV pandemic, from a death sentence to a chronic illness with excellent survival on treatment required us to rethink our (...)
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  11.  3
    Melancholy mapping: A ‘dispatcher’s eye’ and the locations of loss in Johannesburg.Ed Charlton - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 141 (1):14-30.
    Johannesburg has been described variously as an elusive, genre-less, blank, even self-cannibalizing city. Without refusing such rhetorical play, this article seeks to secure a mode of urban analysis that attends to the city’s material losses as well as its conceptual elisions. In so doing, it engages the critical potential, in particular, of melancholy, establishing through this concept not just an affective condition or a psycho-spatial categorization, but a way of mapping the city. Through analysis of Mark Gevisser’s Lost and (...)
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  12.  10
    Ritual, myth and transnational giving within the Zimbabwe Assemblies of God Africa in Johannesburg, South Africa.John Ringson & Admire Chereni - 2020 - HTS Theological Studies 76 (3).
    This article interrogates how rituals and myths may reshape Pentecostal ideology and practice in ways that resonate with the practical concerns of born-again congregants in an exclusive foreign labour market. It draws on a series of field observations conducted in Johannesburg, at two congregations of the Zimbabwe Assemblies of God Africa – a born-again movement with roots in Zimbabwe – between 2009 and 2016. The authors critically examine the shifting architecture of the ritual of Working Talents and its contradictory (...)
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  13.  19
    Vigilante violence and “forward panic” in Johannesburg’s townships.Mark Gross - 2016 - Theory and Society 45 (3):239-263.
    Vigilante violence tends to take place in areas or situations in which the state is unable or unwilling to provide for the safety of certain groups. Crime control vigilantism can be understood as an alternative means of controlling crime and providing security where the state does not. The violent punishment inherent in vigilante activity is generally with the ultimate goal of providing safety and security, and thus should theoretically “fit the crime” and not be excessive. However, in many acts of (...)
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  14.  18
    Jozi Rhythmanalogues: Measures of sense and nonsense in Johannesburg’s automatic writing.Mocke Jansen van Veuren - 2014 - Technoetic Arts 12 (2):309-327.
    The city of Johannesburg pulsates with rhythms that are driven by some of its most fundamental characteristics: pressured economic activity, the mingling and movement of bodies, commuting, and a history of race and class segregation. The collaborative Jozi Rhythmanalogues project attempts to make sense of these rhythms by employing sensory experience as a process of explorative thought. In the course of this project, public spaces are documented over long periods through time-lapse films, which are analysed to reveal patterns of (...)
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  15. Structure of shopping nucleations in northern Johannesburg.K. S. O. Beavon - 1980 - Humanitas 6:271-289.
     
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  16.  9
    A Creative Storytelling Project with Women Migrants in Johannesburg, South Africa.Rebecca Walker & Elsa Oliveira - 2020 - Studies in Social Justice 2020 (14):188-209.
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  17.  19
    Capabilities expansion for marginalised migrant youths in Johannesburg: The case of Albert Street School.Wadzanai F. Mkwananzi & Merridy Wilson-Strydom - 2018 - HTS Theological Studies 74 (3):10.
    In this article, we used the capability approach as normative grounding to analyse a particular faith-based intervention targeting ‘youth at the margins’ – in this instance, marginalised migrant youths from Zimbabwe living in Johannesburg, South Africa. We used Albert Street School (AS School), run by Johannesburg’s Central Methodist Church, as our case study to show how this faith-based organisation, through its focus on education, created not only spaces for marginalised youths to aspire towards a better life but also (...)
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  18. The Missing Link / Monument for the Distribution of Wealth (Johannesburg, 2010).Vincent W. J. Van Gerven Oei & Jonas Staal - 2011 - Continent 1 (4):242-252.
    continent. 1.4 (2011): 242—252. Introduction The following two works were produced by visual artist Jonas Staal and writer Vincent W.J. van Gerven Oei during a visit as artists in residence at The Bag Factory, Johannesburg, South Africa during the summer of 2010. Both works were produced in situ and comprised in both cases a public intervention conceived by Staal and a textual work conceived by Van Gerven Oei. It was their aim, in both cases, to produce complementary works that (...)
     
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  19.  23
    Stakeholder inclusiveness in sustainability reporting by mining companies listed on the Johannesburg securities exchange.Deirdré Lingenfelder & Adèle Thomas - 2011 - African Journal of Business Ethics 5 (1):1.
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  20.  6
    Lean Engineering in higher education: a case study at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.Nicoleen Potgieter, Teresa Hattingh & Anne Fitchett - forthcoming - Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education:1-11.
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  21.  4
    Mission as ‘saving’ abandoned infants in Johannesburg inner city: An evaluation of the Door of Hope Mission.Lukwikilu C. Mangayi - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (4).
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  22.  39
    History and Philosophy of Management at The University Of Johannesburg: A New Direction for the Department of Business Management.Geoff A. Goldman - 2009 - Philosophy of Management 8 (1):37-41.
    Trying to introduce post-graduate management students to the world of philosophy is indeed no easy task. Not only is there a shortage of formal schooling in philosophy amongst business school or business management departmental academic staff, but there is resistance from many sides. Fellow academics question the necessity of such ‘wishy-washy’ issues for business and management students and institutional challenges make it difficult to create a syllabus that falls within the expertise area of another academic department. This paper tracks the (...)
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  23.  3
    Corrigendum: Ritual, myth and transnational giving within the Zimbabwe Assemblies of God Africa in Johannesburg, South Africa.Admire Chereni & John Ringson - 2021 - HTS Theological Studies 77 (1).
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  24. The Missing Link/Monument for the Distribution of Wealth (Johannesburg, 2010).Vincent Wj van Gerven Oei & Jonas Staal - 2011 - Continent 1 (4).
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  25.  29
    ‘Half Tiger’: An interrogation of digital and mobile street culture and aesthetic practice in Johannesburg and Nairobi.Tegan Bristow - 2013 - Technoetic Arts 11 (3):221-230.
    In South African slang ‘Half-Tiger’ refers to five rand, half of a ‘Tiger’ (ten rand) and amounts to approximately 60 US cents. It is at the ‘Half-Tiger’ level of commerce where contemporary and deeply afro-urban digital cultural practice is found. A mass street level culture that in East Africa is driven by the mobile phone as socio-political development tool. And in South Africa by a booming media industry that has been hacked and gone viral. These cultures augment music, fashion, politics (...)
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  26.  8
    The role of refugee-established churches in integrating forced migrants: A case study of Word of Life Assembly in Yeoville, Johannesburg.Vedaste Nzayabino - 2010 - HTS Theological Studies 66 (1).
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  27.  8
    Book review: Changing Space, Changing City: Johannesburg after Apartheid. [REVIEW]Siân Butcher - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 141 (1):123-127.
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  28.  10
    Book review: Changing Space, Changing City: Johannesburg after Apartheid. [REVIEW]Siân Butcher - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 141 (1):123-127.
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  29.  61
    Political Refugees - Elemer Balogh: Political Refugees in Ancient Greece (from the period of the tyrants to Alexander the Great). Pp. xvi+134. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press, 1942. Paper boards, 7s. 6 d[REVIEW]M. P. Charlesworth - 1945 - The Classical Review 59 (01):23-24.
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  30.  3
    Elizabeth Gunner, Radio Soundings: South Africa and the Black Modern (Johannesburg: Wits University Press, 2019), 240 pp, ISBN 978-1-108-47064-3. [REVIEW]Siyanda Kobokana - 2023 - Kronos 49 (1):1-6.
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  31.  18
    Revisiting the Question: Why Look at Animals? Wendy Woodward, The Animal Gaze: Animal Subjectivities in Southern African Narratives. Johannesburg: Wits University Press, 2008. 192 pages. [REVIEW]Randy Malamud - 2010 - Society and Animals 18 (2):226-227.
  32. Ulrike Kistner and Philippe Van Haute: Violence, Slavery and Freedom between Hegel and Fanon, Johannesburg: Wits University Press, 2020, 168 pp., ISBN 978-1-77,614-623-9, ISBN 978-1-77,614-627-7. [REVIEW]Cara S. Greene - 2021 - Continental Philosophy Review 55 (1):133-136.
    Violence, Slavery and Freedom between Hegel and Fanon is a volume of secondary literature that dispels common misconceptions about the relationship between Hegelian and Fanonian philosophy, and sheds new light on the connections and divergences between the two thinkers. By engaging in close textual analyses of both Hegel and Fanon, the chapters in this volume disambiguate the philosophical relation between Sartre and Fanon, scrutinize the conflation of Self-Consciousness in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit and subjectivity in Hegel’s Lectures on the Philosophy (...)
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  33.  30
    G. C.Oosthuizen, Shepherd of Lovedale. Johannesburg 1970, VII. 247 pp. 247 pp. [REVIEW]Ernst Dammann - 1972 - Zeitschrift für Religions- Und Geistesgeschichte 24 (2):181-182.
  34.  7
    Patrick Harries. Butterflies and Barbarians: Swiss Missionaries and Systems of Knowledge in South‐East Africa. xvi + 286 pp., illus., bibl., index. Oxford: James Currey; Harare: Weaver Press; Johannesburg: Wits University Press; Athens: Ohio University Press, 2007. $26.95. [REVIEW]David Gordon - 2009 - Isis 100 (4):927-928.
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  35.  33
    Dinner at Trimalchio's. An extract from the Satyricon of Petronius Arbiter, translated by G.J. Acheson. Pp. 72. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press, 1950. Cloth. [REVIEW]G. Clement Whittick - 1952 - The Classical Review 2 (1):50-50.
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  36.  1
    The essence of displacement: A phenomenological analysis of inner-city residents’ experiences in South Africa.Delia Ah Goo - forthcoming - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology.
    Gentrification has led to the eviction and displacement of many people from working-class areas around the world. However, the relationship between gentrification and displacement has sparked much debate in the literature, with some researchers downplaying displacement, while others have argued that gentrification can occur without the displacement of people. These studies have tended to be quantitative in nature. However, there are few qualitative accounts of the experience of displacement and there is little consideration of the affective or phenomenological dimensions of (...)
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  37. Die aard en rol van die reg, 'N wysgerige besinning.- Rede.H. G. Stoker - 1970 - Johannesburg;: Randse Afrikaanse Universiteit.
    Johannesburg 1970. 90 S. m. Abb. [Die Natur u. d. Rolle d. jurist. Bereichs, afrikaans.]
    (Publikasiereeks van d. Randse Afrikaanse Univ. A,36.)
    Mit Zsfass. in engl. Sprache m.d. Tit.: The nature and the role of the jural realm.
     
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  38. Every Conceivable Harm: A Further Defence of Anti-Natalism.David Benatar - 2012 - South African Journal of Philosophy 31 (1):128-164.
    Many people are resistant to the conclusions for which I argued in Better Never to Have Been . I have previously responded to most of the published criticisms of my arguments. Here I respond to a new batch of critics (and to some fellow anti-natalists) who gathered for a conference at the University of Johannesburg and whose papers are published in this special issue of the South African Journal of Philosophy . I am also taking the opportunity to respond (...)
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  39.  71
    Marxism after Polanyi.Michael Burawoy - forthcoming - Rhuthmos.
    This text was originally published in Michelle Williams and Vishwas Satgar, Marxisms in the 21st. Century, Johannesburg, South Africa, Wits University Press, 2013, p. 34-52. We would like to thank Michael Burawoy for allowing us to publish it on RHUTHMOS. What should we do with Marxism ? For most the answer is simple. Bury it ! Mainstream social science has long since bid farewell to Marxism. Talcott Parsons (1967 : 135) dismissed Marxism as a theory whose significance was entirely (...)
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  40.  7
    COVID-19 and Sunday worship in the wake of the pandemic at Our Lady of Loreto, South Africa.Mathias F. Alubafi - 2024 - HTS Theological Studies 80 (1):6.
    Christians, and those of the Roman Catholic Church, have made significant adjustments to their participation in Sunday liturgy in the wake of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. This is especially the case for Catholic Christians at the ‘Our Lady of Loreto’ (OLL) Church in Kempton Park in South Africa. Sunday Church services that used to be compulsory for most Catholic families and community members, are now attended by few and in some cases none from staunch Catholic families and communities. (...)
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  41.  26
    The Experience of Violence by Male Juvenile Offenders Convicted of Assault: A Descriptive Phenomenological Study.Pieter Basson & Pauline Mawson - 2011 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 11 (1):1-10.
    Statistics from both South Africa and the United States of America indicate that the phenomenon of violence amongst youths is increasing. This implies that a larger number of youths are being exposed to the experience of violence and thus present with the complex and multi-dimensional effects of such an experience. Past research has centred mostly on the causative factors that can be statistically represented, with little focus being paid to the juveniles’ in-depth, subjective experience of the phenomenon. For the male (...)
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  42.  20
    City Living: How Urban Spaces and Urban Dwellers Make One Another.Quill R. Kukla - 2021 - Oxford University Press.
    City Living is about urban spaces, urban dwellers, and how these spaces and people make, shape, and change one another. More people live in cities than ever before: more than 50% of the earth's people are urban dwellers. As downtown cores gentrify and globalize, they are becoming more diverse than ever, along lines of race, ethnicity, socioeconomic class, sexuality, and age. Meanwhile, we are in the early stages of what seems sure to be a period of intense civil unrest. During (...)
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  43.  25
    The university in techno-rational times: Critical university studies, South Africa.Aslam Fataar, Shireen Motala, Andre Keet, Premesh Lalu, Sarah Nuttall, Kirti Menon & Luan Staphorst - 2023 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (7):835-843.
    This concept note was produced for a symposium held under the banner of Critical University Studies – South Africa (CUS-SA) at the University of Johannesburg in August 2022. The opening plenary session was addressed by Profs. Premesh Lalu, Sarah Mosoetsa and Sarah Nuttall. A summary of a paper prepared for this symposium by Michael Peters on the university in techno-rational times was presented as part of the panel. The rest of the symposium featured critical discussion in response to this (...)
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  44.  8
    Derek Hook, ed., Lie on Your Wounds: The Prison Correspondence of Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe.Emma Daitz - 2021 - Kronos 47 (1):1-3.
    Derek Hook, Lie on Your Wounds: The Prison Correspondence of Robert Mangaliso, 565 pp., ISBN 9781776142408. Derek Hook's useful and timely Lie on Your Wounds: The Prison Correspondence of Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe brings together in book form the letters of the Robert Sobukwe Papers, an archive currently held at the Wits Historical Research Papers in Johannesburg. Given that the papers were already fully digitised and have been publicly available and easily accessible for some time, it is relevant to ask (...)
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  45.  13
    The Brown Photo Album: An Archive of Feminist Futurity.Jordache A. Ellapen - 2020 - Kronos 46 (1):94-128.
    This photo-essay considers the other lives of family photographs by offering an analysis of my mother's collection of professional studio portraits and other vernacular photographs shot between the mid 1950s and late 1960s. How do we read the photo-archive of an 'Indian' woman born in 1941 to parents who were wards of the colonial state? A woman who was one generation removed from the sugar-cane plantations and coal mines where Indians were indentured as a coercive labour force? Influenced by Santu (...)
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  46.  3
    SWS Distinguished Feminist Lecture: Feminist Politcal Economy in a Globalized World: African Women Migrants in South Africa and the United States.Mary Johnson Osirim - 2018 - Gender and Society 32 (6):765-788.
    Based on research conducted over the past two decades, this lecture examines how the feminist political economy perspective can aid us in understanding the experiences of two populations of African women: Zimbabwean women cross-border traders in South Africa and African immigrant women in the northeastern United States. Feminist political economy compels us to explore the impact of the current phase of globalization as well as the roles of intersectionality and agency in the lives of African women. This research stems from (...)
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  47.  24
    Aux origines de l'apartheid.Thierry Secretan - 2004 - Multitudes 1 (1):271-282.
    Presenting a series of historical portraits of Bantu, Thierry Secretan recounts his investigation into the compounds that housed the black labor of the gold mines of the Rand, around Johannesburg. The use of a « pass » to control the black miners prefigured the apartheid system. From 1904 to 1939,Alfred Martin Duggan-Cronin, an Irish guard at one of the compounds, began to photograph the different kind of people doing the hard labor in the mines. The results were some 7200 (...)
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  48. Transnational Adaptation: ‘The Dead,’ ‘Fools,’ The Dead, and Fools.Liam Kruger - 2023 - In Brandon Chua & Elizabeth Ho (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Global Literary Adaptation in the Twenty-First Century. London: Routledge. pp. 19-33.
    This chapter sketches a literary history of writing the colonial interregnum through the comparison of a canonical Dublin text and its filmic adaptation with a canonical Johannesburg text and its filmic adaptation. Njabulo Ndebele’s short story ‘Fools’ (1983) repurposes formal elements from Joyce’s ‘The Dead’ (1914), transposing strategies for representing late colonial Dublin to a Johannesburg township during the height of apartheid in a context of extreme racial domination; beginning with close comparative readings of both stories, my chapter (...)
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  49.  26
    Viewpoint discrimination and contestation of ideas on its merits, leadership and organizational ethics: expanding the African bioethics agenda.Sylvester C. Chima, Takafira Mduluza & Julius Kipkemboi - 2013 - BMC Medical Ethics 14 (S1):S1.
    The 3rd Pan-African Ethics Human Rights and Medical Law (3rd EHRML) conference was held in Johannesburg on July 7, 2013, as part of the Africa Health Congress. The conference brought together bioethicists, researchers and scholars from South Africa, Zimbabwe, Kenya and Nigeria working in the field of bioethics as well as students and healthcare workers interested in learning about ethical issues confronting the African continent. The conference which ran with a theme of "Bioethical and legal perspectives in biomedical research (...)
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  50.  66
    Reflections on new thinking about scientific realism.Anjan Chakravartty - 2017 - Synthese 194 (9):3379-3392.
    In August 2014 the Universities of Pretoria and Johannesburg hosted a major international conference in Cape Town, ‘New Thinking about Scientific Realism’, to assess extant discussions of the view in hopes of opening up new avenues of research, and to sow the seeds of further development and consideration of these prospective lines of inquiry. In this, the concluding essay of the Special Issue collecting some of the descendants of these earlier presentations, I extract some of the more striking themes (...)
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