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        Preface
- 
            
            
        Liesel Hibbert
        
 
                                    
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                                            Chapters in this book
- Contents i
 - Preface vii
 - Introduction 1
 - 1. The Release of Nelson Mandela as the Advent of Democracy 12
 - 2. Shifts in the Linguistic Landscape, post 1994 20
 - 3. Linguistic Changes in Parliament 1994–1998: Paving the Way for Linguistic Democracy 29
 - 4. Reconfigured Features of the African Oral Tradition 44
 - 5. Recontextualised Residues of Rhetoric from the Previous Era 59
 - 6. Historical Explanations for Literacy Backlogs in South Africa 67
 - 7. Black South African English Versus Other African Englishes in the 1990s 75
 - 8. The Rhetoric of Pan-Africanism and the African Renaissance 85
 - 9. The Debate on African Identity in South Africa 90
 - 10. Expressions of Neo-Traditional Patriarchy in the Speeches of President Zuma 104
 - 11. Return to Self-Censorship in Political Journalism: Echoes of the 1950s and 1960s 120
 - 12. Localisation Initiatives 132
 - 13. The Position of African Languages 140
 - 14. Superdiversity and Translanguaging: A New Discursive Order 148
 - References 157
 - Index 166
 
Chapters in this book
- Contents i
 - Preface vii
 - Introduction 1
 - 1. The Release of Nelson Mandela as the Advent of Democracy 12
 - 2. Shifts in the Linguistic Landscape, post 1994 20
 - 3. Linguistic Changes in Parliament 1994–1998: Paving the Way for Linguistic Democracy 29
 - 4. Reconfigured Features of the African Oral Tradition 44
 - 5. Recontextualised Residues of Rhetoric from the Previous Era 59
 - 6. Historical Explanations for Literacy Backlogs in South Africa 67
 - 7. Black South African English Versus Other African Englishes in the 1990s 75
 - 8. The Rhetoric of Pan-Africanism and the African Renaissance 85
 - 9. The Debate on African Identity in South Africa 90
 - 10. Expressions of Neo-Traditional Patriarchy in the Speeches of President Zuma 104
 - 11. Return to Self-Censorship in Political Journalism: Echoes of the 1950s and 1960s 120
 - 12. Localisation Initiatives 132
 - 13. The Position of African Languages 140
 - 14. Superdiversity and Translanguaging: A New Discursive Order 148
 - References 157
 - Index 166