Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 April 2010
On the night when Nelson Mandela made his acceptance speech as victor of South Africa's first democratic election, he paid tribute to ‘some of South Africa's great leaders including John Dube, Josiah Gumede, Moorooghia Naidoo, Dr Abdurahman, Chief Luthuli, Lilian Ngoyi, Bram Fisher, Helen Joseph, Yusuf Dadoo, Moses Kotane, Chris Hani and Oliver Tambo. They should have been here to celebrate with us, for this is their achievement too’.
1 Nelson Mandela victory acceptance speech, 2 May 1994.
2 PAC Vaal region leader Amin Lutchka in ‘PAC is Angry’, Weekly Mail, 17–25 March 1995.
3 ‘Revised History Angers Whites’, The Times, 25 October 1995. Ironically the author, Rodney Davenport, is seen by radical historians as a relatively conservative writer.
4 ‘Row Looms over Settler Murals’, Sunday Times Metro, 8 October 1995.
5 Vanessa Carter reported this in ‘Fall of the Ancien Regime’, Cape Times, 25 January 1996.
6 ‘Back to the Drawing Board’, South African Cultural History Museum Newsletter (December 1995).
7 ‘Sweeping Away the Cobwebs of Old’, On the Waterfront (Summer 1993) 8–9.
8 Worden, N and van Heyningen, E., ‘Signs of the Times: Tourism and Public History at Cape Town's Victoria and Alfred Waterfront’, Cahiers d'Etudes Africaines 36/2 (1996).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
9 Rassool, C. and Witz, L., ‘“South Africa: A World in One Country”: Moments in International Tourist Encounters with Wildlife, the Primitive and the Modern’, Cahiers d'Etudes Africaines 36/2 (1996).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
10 Kros, C., ‘Experiencing a Century in a Day?: Making More of Gold Reef City’, South African Historical Journal 29 (1993) 28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
11 Hall, M., ‘The Legend of the Lost City’, Journal of Southern African Studies 21/2 (1995) 179–199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
12 ‘Laying Sandile's Head to Rest’, Weekly Mail, 26 January - 1 February 1996.