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9780821427149 Academic Inspection Copy

Walter Sisulu

A Sense of Outrage
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Although hailed, alongside Nelson Mandela and Oliver Tambo, as one of the African National Congress's holy trinity, Walter Sisulu has remained a relatively neglected figure in the historiography of the struggle for liberation in South Africa. Modest and unassuming, Sisulu was always content to stay in the background in a way that has long belied his importance. This nuanced and highly original biography, drafted by political historian Tom Lodge before his untimely death, provides a powerful corrective. Lodge describes Sisulu as an exceptional organizer, the most influential planner of the ANC's mass campaigning during the 1950s, a principled but undoctrinaire communist, and like Mandela, an advocate of the necessity of armed struggle. He also served as the careful navigator of the ambiguous relationship between the ANC and Umkhonto we Sizwe, and Lodge details how Sisulu, with his exceptional grasp of the subtleties of fact and law, confounded the prosecution as he sat in the dock in the Rivonia trial. Sentenced to life imprisonment with his fellow defendants, Sisulu became a calming influence amid the divisive ideological debates that took place on Robben Island, as well as a constant source of strength and support to Mandela. After his 1989 release from jail-ahead of Mandela-he again demonstrated his prowess as the chief organizer of the ANC as it reestablished itself ahead of the 1994 elections. Sociologist Roger Southall stepped in to complete Lodge's detailed analysis of Sisulu's commitment and contribution to South African freedom, an encomium that Walter Sisulu richly deserves.
Tom Lodge was a preeminent chronicler of the struggle for liberation in South Africa. His books included Mandela: A Critical Biography; Black Politics in South Africa Since 1945; Sharpeville: An Apartheid Massacre and Its Consequences; and Red Road to Freedom: A History of the South African Communist Party, 1921-2021. He was a professor of peace and conflict studies at the University of Limerick. Roger Southall is an emeritus professor of sociology at the University of the Witwatersrand. His books include Imperialism or Solidarity? International Labour and South African Trade Unions and Smuts and Mandela: The Men Who Made South Africa.
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