If you are sitting in a South African school or university right now,
you need to put aside 1948 and "Bantu Education" as a primary target of
enquiry--these were little more than steps along a road that was already
paved--and study when, where and how your institution came into being in
the first place. This book joins the growing body of work (much of it by
South African scholars) displacing the many mind-numbingly dull texts
loaded with assumptions and logics that, in the case of South Africa,
reify a simplified colonial explanation of the past. We must fully
investigate the ways in which past and contemporary experiences
throughout Britain and the lands it conquered became instructive for
this period of South African history.