Sudanese Memoirs
Title | Sudanese Memoirs PDF eBook |
Author | Herbert Palmer |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 284 |
Release | 2019-04-01 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0429609221 |
Published in 1967: Sudanese Memoirs is a foremost contribution to the ethnological and historical literature of Western Africa. In three volumes, they comprise a large number of translations from Arabic manuscripts whcih were mostly collected in the northern emirates of Nigeria.
Sudanese Memoirs
Title | Sudanese Memoirs PDF eBook |
Author | Herbert Richmond Palmer |
Publisher | |
Pages | 138 |
Release | 1928 |
Genre | Sudan |
ISBN |
Sudanese Memoirs
Title | Sudanese Memoirs PDF eBook |
Author | Sir Herbert Richmond Palmer |
Publisher | |
Pages | |
Release | 1985 |
Genre | Sudan |
ISBN |
Seed of South Sudan
Title | Seed of South Sudan PDF eBook |
Author | Majok Marier |
Publisher | McFarland |
Pages | 205 |
Release | 2014-05-14 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1476614970 |
One of the most detailed books on the Lost Boys of Sudan since South Sudan became the world's newest nation in 2011, this is a memoir of Majok Marier, an Agar Dinka who was 7 when war came to his village in southern Sudan. During a 21-year civil war, 2 million lives were lost and 80 percent of the South Sudanese people were displaced. Tens of thousands of boys like Majok fled from the Sudanese Army that wanted to kill them. Surviving on grasses, grains, and help from villagers along the way, Majok walked nearly a thousand miles to a refugee camp in Ethiopia. Majok and 3,800 like him emigrated to the United States in 2001 while the civil war still raged. His story is joined to others' in this book.
Tell This in My Memory
Title | Tell This in My Memory PDF eBook |
Author | Eve M. Troutt Powell |
Publisher | Stanford University Press |
Pages | 265 |
Release | 2012-11-14 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0804783756 |
In the late nineteenth century, an active slave trade sustained social and economic networks across the Ottoman Empire and throughout Egypt, Sudan, the Caucasus, and Western Europe. Unlike the Atlantic trade, slavery in this region crossed and mixed racial and ethnic lines. Fair-skinned Circassian men and women were as vulnerable to enslavement in the Nile Valley as were teenagers from Sudan or Ethiopia. Tell This in My Memory opens up a new window in the study of slavery in the modern Middle East, taking up personal narratives of slaves and slave owners to shed light on the anxieties and intimacies of personal experience. The framework of racial identity constructed through these stories proves instrumental in explaining how countries later confronted—or not—the legacy of the slave trade. Today, these vocabularies of slavery live on for contemporary refugees whose forced migrations often replicate the journeys and stigmas faced by slaves in the nineteenth century.
Alek
Title | Alek PDF eBook |
Author | Alek Wek |
Publisher | Harper Collins |
Pages | 228 |
Release | 2009-10-13 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 0061857440 |
Since the day she was scouted by a modeling agent while shopping at a London street fair when she was just nineteen, Alek Wek's life has been nothing short of a fantasy. When she's not the featured model in print campaigns for hip companies, or gracing the cover of Elle, she is working the runways of Paris, New York, and Milan to model for the world's leading designers, including Karl Lagerfeld for Chanel. But nothing in her early years prepared her for the life of a model. Born in Wau, in the southern Sudan, Alek knew only a few years of peace with her family before they were caught up in a ruthless civil war that pitted outlaw militias, the Muslim-dominated government, and southern rebels against each other in a brutal conflict that killed nearly two million people. Here is her daring story of fleeing the war on foot and her escape to London, where her rise from young model to supermodel was all the more notable because of Alek's non-European looks. A probe into the Sudanese conflict and an inside look into the life of a most unique supermodel, Alek is a book that will inspire as well as inform.
God Grew Tired of Us
Title | God Grew Tired of Us PDF eBook |
Author | John Bul Dau |
Publisher | National Geographic Books |
Pages | 284 |
Release | 2008 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 1426202121 |
Explores the indomitable spirit of three "Lost boys" from the Sudan who are forced to leave their homeland because of a civil war. They triumph over adversities and relocate to the U.S., where they remain deeply committed to helping the friends and family they left behind.