Difference between revisions of "Nelson Mandela"
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=Apartheid / South Africa in Music= | =Apartheid / South Africa in Music= | ||
− | international | + | ==international== |
− | South African | + | *Youssou N'dour |
+ | *Gil Scott Heron (Johannesburg) | ||
+ | *the SWAPO singers with Robert Wyatt ("Winds of Change") | ||
+ | *Alpha Blondy ("Apartheid is Nazism") | ||
+ | *Peter Gabriel "Biko" (en particulier) | ||
+ | *Peter Tosh (Apartheid) | ||
+ | *"Sun City" (Zandt) | ||
+ | *Paul Simon, <i>Graceland</i>, breaks the cultural embargo? | ||
+ | *Bono - U2 | ||
+ | =South African= | ||
+ | Miriam Makeba. | ||
=Comparisons with segregation in the Southern US= | =Comparisons with segregation in the Southern US= |
Revision as of 13:22, 8 December 2013
Contents
[hide]Articles
"Nelson Mandela: the radical", AJE
A2 level
Literature
Breyten Breytenbach's "Nelson Mandela is Free" from [i]The Memory of Birds in Times of Revolution[/i] (1990)
Apartheid / South Africa in Music
international
- Youssou N'dour
- Gil Scott Heron (Johannesburg)
- the SWAPO singers with Robert Wyatt ("Winds of Change")
- Alpha Blondy ("Apartheid is Nazism")
- Peter Gabriel "Biko" (en particulier)
- Peter Tosh (Apartheid)
- "Sun City" (Zandt)
- Paul Simon, Graceland, breaks the cultural embargo?
- Bono - U2
South African
Miriam Makeba.
Comparisons with segregation in the Southern US
Comparisons with Indian reservations in the US
excerpt of the full report to the Office of the High Commissioner for Human rights