WISER publications
Found 17 results
Filters: Author is Mokoena, Hlonipha [Clear All Filters]
Black Orpheus: Black Internationalism in a Time of Blackness." The Thinker 91 (2022): 25-30.
"States of Emergency—The Apartheid Paranoia in South Africa’s Lockdown." Current History 121 (2022): 196-198.
"Vigilance: petitions, politics, and the African Christian converts of the nineteenth century." In Worlding the South, 327-345. Manchester University Press, 2021.
"‘Carpe DM’: Seizing the Afropolitan Day." Current History 119 (2020): 194-196.
"‘The hardness of the times and the dearness of all the necessaries of life’: class and consumption in bilingual nineteenth-century newspapers." Social History 45 (2020): 453-475.
"Navigating the African Archive–A Conversation between Tamar Garb and Hlonipha Mokoena." Critical Arts 33 (2019): 40-51.
"Zuluness on Trial: Re-Reading John W. Colenso’s 1874 Langalibalele and the Amahlubi Tribe: Being Remarks Upon the Official Record." The Journal of African History 60 (2019): 67-85.
"Zuluness on Trial: Re-Reading John W. Colenso's 1874 Langalibalele and the Amahlubi Tribe: Being Remarks Upon the Official Record." The Journal of African History 60 (2019): 67-85.
"‘The Black House’, or How the Zulus Became Jews." Journal of Southern African Studies 44 (2018): 401-411.
"Kwaito: The Revolution Was Not Televised; It Announced Itself in Song." In Assuming {Boycott}: {Resistance}, {Agency} and {Cultural} {Production}, edited by Estefan Kareem, Kuoni Carin and Raicovich Laura. OR Books, 2017.
"The Rickshaw Puller and the Zulu Policeman: Zulu Men, Work, and Clothing in Colonial Natal." Critical Arts 31 (2017): 123-141.
"The Afterlife of Words: Magema Fuze, Bilingual Print Journalism and the Making of a Self-Archive." In African {Print} {Cultures}: {Newspapers} and {Their} {Publics} in the {Twentieth} {Century}, edited by Derek Peterson, Steph Newell and Emma Hunter, 361-388. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2016.
"Black Diamonds in the Rough In The Journalist., 2016.
From slavery to colonialism and school rules: a history of myths about black hair In The Conversation., 2016.
Johnny Fingo: war as work on the Eastern Cape Frontier." Kronos 42 (2016): 214-231.
"‘Knobkerrie’: Some Preliminary Notes on the Transformation of a Weapon into a Swagger Stick, or Sometimes a Stick is Not Just a Stick." In Tribing and {Untribing} the {Archive}: {Set}, edited by Carolyn Hamilton and Nessa Leibhammer. University of KwaZulu-Natal Press, 2016.
"The Policeman, Reconsidered." Interventions 18 (2016): 800-805.
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