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[...]I proudly told people of my father's work, assuming he hoped to improve conditions. Years later my mother proclaimed something else, something I now cannot remember the details of-I listened to her grievances with as much attention as the slip-sliding of the interior of one of those very m...

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Veröffentlicht in:World literature today 2019-06, Vol.93 (3), p.72-73
1. Verfasser: Jensen, Sandra
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container_title World literature today
container_volume 93
creator Jensen, Sandra
description [...]I proudly told people of my father's work, assuming he hoped to improve conditions. Years later my mother proclaimed something else, something I now cannot remember the details of-I listened to her grievances with as much attention as the slip-sliding of the interior of one of those very mines-but the import remains clear: my father viewed the miners as nothing more than rats in an experiment. [...]recently I believed my mother marched (adorned by her diamond?) with the Black Sash, a white women's resistance organization, but when I asked her brother about this, he said, "Oh, no, she wasn't political like that."
doi_str_mv 10.1353/wlt.2019.0043
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subjects Conflict diamonds
Cover Feature: Climate Change
Family history
Humans and nature
Mother-daughter relations
Place identity
Politics
Provenance
title Provenance
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