Notes
1 Magubane, My Life & Times, 365–67.
2 Magubane, The Politics of History in South Africa; Magubane, “Whose Memory-Whose History? The Illusion of Liberal and Radical Historical Debates,” 252.
3 Magubane, “Whose Memory-Whose History?” 252.
4 On Nembula see Zondi, African Demand and Medical Missions.
5 Karis and Carter, eds., From Protest to Challenge, Volume 4, 137. See also Suttner, “The Character and Formation of Intellectuals Within the ANC-led South African Liberation Movement”.
6 Karis and Carter, eds., From Protest to Challenge, 24.
7 Ibid., 164.
8 Magubane, My Life & Times, 3–4.
9 Ibid., 137.
10 Magubane, Imperialism and Political Change in South Africa.
11 Magubane, “From Détente to the Rise of the Garrison State,” in South African Democracy Education Trust (SADET), 48.
12 Magubane, “Whose Memory-Whose History?” 253.
13 Magubane, “The Crisis of the Garrison State,” 10. See also Ndlovu “The African National Congress and Negotiations,” Chap. 2 in the same volume.
14 Huntington, “Reform and Stability in a Multi-Ethnic Society,” 19.
15 The Nation Magazine, 22 November, 1986.
16 See also Magubane, My Life & Times.
17 Inkundla yaBantu, January and February 1941.
18 Ntongela Masilela, “New African Intellectuals.” See Masilela’s website on “New African Intellectuals”.
19 Legassick, “Debating the Revival of the Workers’ Movement in the 1970s: The South African Democracy Education Trust and Post-Apartheid Patriotic History,” 240–66; Sithole, “Contestation over Knowledge Production or Ideological Bullying? A Response to Legassick on the Workers’ Movement,” 222–41.
20 Cited in B.M. Magubane untitled paper/chapter on South African historiography, SADET, 26, A summarized version of the lengthy paper/chapter was published. See Magubane, “Whose Memory-Whose history?” 254–77.
21 Magubane, “Untitled Paper/Chapter on South African Historiography,” SADET, 28.
22 Ibid., 29.
23 Ibid., 34.
24 Radical History Review, 46, No. 7 (Winter 1990).
25 Magubane, “Untitled Paper/Chapter on South African historiography,” 35–37; Magubane “Whose Memory-Whose history?” 273–76.
26 Magubane, “Attitudes Towards Feminism Among Women in the ANC, 1950–1990: A Theoretical Re-Interpretation,” 981.
27 Magubane, “Untitled Paper/Chapter on South African historiography,” SADET, 35–37.
28 Ibid., 37.
29 Ibid., 38. See also Magubane “Whose Memory-Whose History?” 274.
30 Sithole and Ndlovu “The Revival of the Labor Movement, 1970–1980”; Hemson, Legassick and Ulrich, “White Activists and the Revival of the Workers’ Movement”.
31 Ndlovu, The Soweto Uprisings: Counter-Memories of June 1976 (Randburg: Ravan Press, 1998), 7.
32 See Ndlovu, “The Soweto Uprising,” SADET, Road to Democracy in South Africa, Volume 2, Chap. 7.