Contemporary South African literature reflects a fascination with
Russian and Eastern European stories of revolution and transformation as
well as resistance to state oppression. In this groundbreaking book,
Monica Popescu studies the formative role played by an imaginary and
real Eastern Europe in literature written during and after apartheid.
Reading the end of apartheid against the fall of the communist regimes
in Eastern Europe, she rethinks the genealogy and aims of postcolonial
studies in the context both of the Cold War and of the various forms of
colonial domination and resistance in South Africa.