2008
DOI: 10.1111/j.1478-0542.2007.00508.x
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South Africa's Soviet Connection1

Abstract: To outward appearance at least, South Africa and the Soviet Union did not enjoy close relations during most of the 20th century. Diplomatic relations existed on paper between the Boer republics and Russia during the Anglo‐Boer war but they ended when the republics lost their independence. During the 1920s and 1930s trade was negligible, and the new high point in mutual interest and relations came only during the Second World War, when Soviet diplomatic or trade missions opened in Johannesburg, Pretoria and Cap… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…Generally written in the active voice, there is a lapse when explaining how 'Tanzania came to be subjected to a one-party state' (Pillay et al 2013, 131). However, this textbook does reveal subtleties of interpretation not present in Fernandez et al It acknowledges, for example, that for several reasons 'Southern Africa was never a high priority on the agenda of the Soviet Union', thus also showing the shift in emphasis from the anti-communist narrative of the apartheid period to one more sensitive and alert to new historiographies on South Africa's historical relationship with Russia and the Soviet Union (Filatova 2008;Pillay et al 2013, 378;Shubin 2008a).…”
Section: Representations Of the Cold War In Postapartheid Textbooksmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Generally written in the active voice, there is a lapse when explaining how 'Tanzania came to be subjected to a one-party state' (Pillay et al 2013, 131). However, this textbook does reveal subtleties of interpretation not present in Fernandez et al It acknowledges, for example, that for several reasons 'Southern Africa was never a high priority on the agenda of the Soviet Union', thus also showing the shift in emphasis from the anti-communist narrative of the apartheid period to one more sensitive and alert to new historiographies on South Africa's historical relationship with Russia and the Soviet Union (Filatova 2008;Pillay et al 2013, 378;Shubin 2008a).…”
Section: Representations Of the Cold War In Postapartheid Textbooksmentioning
confidence: 85%