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Viewing 'the other' over a hundred and a score more years : South Africa and Russia (1890-2010)

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Liebenberg, I

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Whether novel is history or history is novel, is a tantalising point. “The novel is no longer a work, a thing to make last, to connect the past with the future but (only) one current event among many, a gesture with no tomorrow” Kundera (1988:19). One does not have to agree with Kundera to find that social sciences, as historiography holds a story, a human narrative to be shared when focused on a case or cases. In this case, relations between peoples over more than a century are discussed. At the same time, what is known as broader casing in qualitative studies enters the picture. The relations between the governments and the peoples of South Africa and Russia (including the Soviet Union), sometimes in conflict or peace and sometimes at variance are discussed. Past and present communalities and differences between two national entities within a changing international or global context deserve attention while moments of auto-ethnography compliment the study. References are made to the international political economy in the context of the relations between these countries.

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Liebenberg, I. 2010. Viewing 'the other' over a hundred and a score more years : South Africa and Russia (1890-2010). TD The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa, 6(2):428 – 460, Dec. [http://dspace.nwu.ac.za/handle/10394/3605]

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