The Prison Letters of Nelson Mandela
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Choice Review
Drawing primarily from South Africa's National Archives, Venter has assembled a superb collection of Nelson Mandela's prison letters written between 1962 and 1990. Mandela's letters follow chronologically, beginning with his incarceration in Pretoria Local Prison and followed by Robben Island, Pollsmoor, and Victor Verster. Letter after letter attests to Mandela's strength of character and extraordinary resiliency. Oftentimes prison authorities heavily censored his letters or simply did not send them, yet Mandela persevered even in the most heartbreaking moments. In a 10-month period in 1968--69 Mandela lost his mother and firstborn son, and learned that security police apprehended and imprisoned his wife, Winnie. In a letter to Winnie in 1969, Mandela encouraged her to remain resolute and strong: "A new world will be won not by those who stand at a distance … but by those who are in the arena." Throughout his 27 years in prison Mandela's respectful defiance toward apartheid authorities never wavered. Mandela sent his final prison letter to the commissioner of prisons on February 11, 1990, moments before walking to freedom through the prison gates. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty. --James O. Gump, University of San Diego
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* In 1962, when he was arrested, Nelson Mandela, who would become the first black and democratically elected president of South Africa and Nobel Peace Prize recipient, was a 44-year-old husband, father of five young children, and prominent anti-apartheid activist. He was incarcerated for 27 years, primarily in the Robben Island Maximum Security Prison, where he labored in a quarry by day and studied at night for his law degree. A man of indomitable spirit and conviction, Mandela wrote hundreds of letters, 255 of which are gathered here to resounding effect. With editor Venter's succinct contextual information, Mandela's reasoned and diligent letters tell the inside story of a freedom fighter who refused to betray his principles and comrades, no matter how much anguish he endured in isolation from his loved ones, who also suffered terribly. Mandela's extensive correspondence to prison officials regarding prisoners' rights and his needs for everything from eyeglasses to school materials are as precise and formally argued as legal briefs, while loving letters to his family, including his wife, Winnie, who, at times, was also imprisoned, deliver reassurance, advice, and encouragement. A landmark historical source and a dramatic read, this collection of Mandela's letters illuminates with stunning immediacy the genius, sacrifice, discipline, courage, and commitment of a world-changing civil rights hero.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2010 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
The value of this epistolary trove isn't limited to scholars of the decades-long struggle against apartheid, though Venter's diligent collection and annotation is certainly tailored for research purposes. Drawn from Mandela's letters to family, friends, comrades, admirers, and even his own jailers, this dense and vivid archive goes from his 1962 incarceration on the infamous Robben Island to his 1990 release from Victor Verster Prison, paving the way for his election in 1994 as South Africa's first black president. Throughout, his insistence on correct legal procedure and unflinching advocacy for his beliefs demonstrates the conviction that marked Mandela as a leading statesman, even while behind bars. More personal correspondence, such as those mourning the death of his oldest son in his absence, reveal the high price the South African government exacted from him. Always thoughtful, Mandela is particularly eloquent when engaging his oppressors directly, as in a 1971 letter (originally in Afrikaans) to the commander of Robben Island: "Only a person armed with love for his fellow human beings, and who cares about others, will succeed where force and power will be applied in vain." Anyone seeking to understand one of the guiding lights of the antiapartheid fight will find these letters a vital resource. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Library Journal Review
Compiled from various collections over ten years and edited by Venter (491 Days), this collection of 255 prison letters written by the late revolutionary and former president of South Africa provides a unique glimpse of Mandela during his 27-year incarceration, which he served at four different prisons. Context regarding the significance of these letters is provided throughout, including how prison authorities censored and regulated prisoner correspondence by controlling what words could be used and limiting the number of words written. Many of the letters found within this work never made it to the intended recipient owing to their being lost or thrown away, but Mandela made a point to record each letter, many word for word. Both intimate and diplomatic, these writings showcase Mandela's various roles as a husband, father, friend, and lawyer. Photographs, scans of letters, footnotes, and a glossary referencing individuals and events are found within the letters. VERDICT An important work for library collections and voracious readers of history.-David Miller, Farmville P.L., NC © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Book Review
An epistolary memoir of Nelson Mandela's prison years.From August 1962 to February 1990, Mandela (1918-2013) was imprisoned by the apartheid state of South Africa. During his more than 27 years in prison, the bulk of which he served on the notorious Robben Island prison off the shores of Cape Town, he wrote thousands of letters to family and friends, lawyers and fellow African National Congress members, prison officials, and members of the government. Heavily censored for both content and length, letters from Robben Island and South Africa's other political prisons did not always reach their intended targets; when they did, the censorship could make them virtually unintelligible. To assemble this vitally important collection, Venter (A Free Mind: Ahmed Kathrada's Notebook from Robben Island, 2006, etc.), a longtime Johannesburg-based editor and journalist, pored through these letters in various public and private archives across South Africa and beyond as well as Mandela's own notebooks, in which he transcribed versions of these letters. The result is a necessary, intimate portrait of the great leader. The man who emerges is warm and intelligent and a savvy, persuasive, and strategic thinker. During his life, Mandela was a loving husband and father, a devotee of the ANC's struggle, and capable of interacting with prominent statesmen and the ANC's rank and file. He was not above flattery or hard-nosed steeliness toward his captors as suited his needs, and he was always yearning for freedom, not onlyor even primarilyfor himself, but rather for his people, a goal that is the constant theme of this collection and was the consuming vision of his entire time as a prisoner. Venter adds tremendous value with his annotations and introductions to the work as a whole and to the book's various sections.A valuable contribution to our understanding of one of history's most vital figures. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
*Starred Review* In 1962, when he was arrested, Nelson Mandela, who would become the first black and democratically elected president of South Africa and Nobel Peace Prize recipient, was a 44-year-old husband, father of five young children, and prominent anti-apartheid activist. He was incarcerated for 27 years, primarily in the Robben Island Maximum Security Prison, where he labored in a quarry by day and studied at night for his law degree. A man of indomitable spirit and conviction, Mandela wrote hundreds of letters, 255 of which are gathered here to resounding effect. With editor Venter's succinct contextual information, Mandela's reasoned and diligent letters tell the inside story of a freedom fighter who refused to betray his principles and comrades, no matter how much anguish he endured in isolation from his loved ones, who also suffered terribly. Mandela's extensive correspondence to prison officials regarding prisoners' rights and his needs for everything from eyeglasses to school materials are as precise and formally argued as legal briefs, while loving letters to his family, including his wife, Winnie, who, at times, was also imprisoned, deliver reassurance, advice, and encouragement. A landmark historical source and a dramatic read, this collection of Mandela's letters illuminates with stunning immediacy the genius, sacrifice, discipline, courage, and commitment of a world-changing civil rights hero. Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
Compiled from various collections over ten years and edited by Venter (491 Days), this collection of 255 prison letters written by the late revolutionary and former president of South Africa provides a unique glimpse of Mandela during his 27-year incarceration, which he served at four different prisons. Context regarding the significance of these letters is provided throughout, including how prison authorities censored and regulated prisoner correspondence by controlling what words could be used and limiting the number of words written. Many of the letters found within this work never made it to the intended recipient owing to their being lost or thrown away, but Mandela made a point to record each letter, many word for word. Both intimate and diplomatic, these writings showcase Mandela's various roles as a husband, father, friend, and lawyer. Photographs, scans of letters, footnotes, and a glossary referencing individuals and events are found within the letters. VERDICT An important work for library collections and voracious readers of history.—David Miller, Farmville P.L., NC
Copyright 2018 Library Journal.Publishers Weekly Reviews
The value of this epistolary trove isn't limited to scholars of the decades-long struggle against apartheid, though Venter's diligent collection and annotation is certainly tailored for research purposes. Drawn from Mandela's letters to family, friends, comrades, admirers, and even his own jailers, this dense and vivid archive goes from his 1962 incarceration on the infamous Robben Island to his 1990 release from Victor Verster Prison, paving the way for his election in 1994 as South Africa's first black president. Throughout, his insistence on correct legal procedure and unflinching advocacy for his beliefs demonstrates the conviction that marked Mandela as a leading statesman, even while behind bars. More personal correspondence, such as those mourning the death of his oldest son in his absence, reveal the high price the South African government exacted from him. Always thoughtful, Mandela is particularly eloquent when engaging his oppressors directly, as in a 1971 letter (originally in Afrikaans) to the commander of Robben Island: "Only a person armed with love for his fellow human beings, and who cares about others, will succeed where force and power will be applied in vain." Anyone seeking to understand one of the guiding lights of the antiapartheid fight will find these letters a vital resource. (July)
Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Mandela, N., Venter, S., & Kani, A. (2018). The Prison Letters of Nelson Mandela (Unabridged). Recorded Books, Inc..
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Mandela, Nelson, Sahm Venter and Atandwa Kani. 2018. The Prison Letters of Nelson Mandela. Recorded Books, Inc.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Mandela, Nelson, Sahm Venter and Atandwa Kani. The Prison Letters of Nelson Mandela Recorded Books, Inc, 2018.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Mandela, N., Venter, S. and Kani, A. (2018). The prison letters of nelson mandela. Unabridged Recorded Books, Inc.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Mandela, Nelson, Sahm Venter, and Atandwa Kani. The Prison Letters of Nelson Mandela Unabridged, Recorded Books, Inc., 2018.
Copy Details
Collection | Owned | Available | Number of Holds |
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Libby | 1 | 0 | 1 |