Class Action
In Pursuit of a Larger Life
Charles Abrahams is a world-class lawyer who sued multinationals for colluding with the apartheid government, but at twelve
he was determined to become a world-famous heartsurgeon. Then a school inspector shattered his dream: coloured children from the Cape Flats `should not aim too high'. Les mer
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Vår pris:
166,-
(Paperback)
Leveringstid: Sendes innen 7 virkedager
På grunn av Brexit-tilpasninger og tiltak for å begrense covid-19 kan det dessverre oppstå forsinket levering
Charles Abrahams is a world-class lawyer who sued multinationals for colluding with the apartheid government, but at twelve
he was determined to become a world-famous heartsurgeon. Then a school inspector shattered his dream: coloured children from
the Cape Flats `should not aim too high'. Class Action is the story of how Charles aimed high anyway, despite a childhood
that included forced removal, dire poverty and the deep sense of shame of being neither white nor a `white coloured'. As one
of eleven children in a poor family, he experienced constant hardship and family strife. Violence was ubiquitous: his street
was notorious for its gang fights, his father abused his mother at home, and schoolteachers beat darker-skinned children like
him. Charles wanted a larger life, and he found it through student politics, anti-apartheid activism and reading. He studied
relentlessly, finding not only formidable political weapons, but a means to delve into the damage apartheid had done to his
personal identity, selfesteem, sexuality and morality. He went on to qualify as a lawyer and, after defending local gangsters,
he sought to do good through human-rights and class-action law. He has since spearheaded some of South Africa's most historic,
groundbreaking lawsuits, pursuing justice for ordinary citizens whose lives were ruined by powers too profit-driven to ever
think about them. Class Action depicts a remarkable journey of resistance and healing in reaction to institutionalised greed
and racism and the harm it has done to our identities, our relationships and the people of our country.