Type | Working Paper |
Title | "The Last of the Queen’s Men": A true story of a Lesotho experience? |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2003 |
URL | http://afsaap.org.au/assets/Lucas1.pdf |
Abstract | "The Last of the Queen’s Men. A Lesotho Experience " by Peter Sanders was reviewed by David Goldsworthy in the December 2001 issue of the Australasian Review of African Studies. This paper considers what contribution the book has made to the social history of the white community in what was then Basutoland. The book covers the author’s time as a District Officer in the Basutoland Administration from 1961 until 1966 the year when Lesotho gained its Independence. Sanders (2000:3) has three objectives: to recapture what it was like, "to work as an administrator in the last days of British rule in Basutoland, and then as a scholar in the early days of Lesotho’s independence." He was also trying to place his experience, "as a small and atypical part of the extraordinary history of contacts and relations between black and white in southern Africa, and in Lesotho in particular." Sanders (1989:194) read Greats, alias Latin and Greek, at Oxford and after Basutoland went on to get a PhD in African History, to write The Life of Moshoeshoe, and become Chief Executive of the Race Relations Board in Britain from 1988 to 1993 (Glaze 2001:53). He therefore seems highly qualified to write his book. My qualifications for writing this piece are less impressive. I am a demographer, I have read a lot of autobiographies, and I was there. I have known Peter for over forty years and in signing my copy of his book he kindly credited me with the title of Chapter 9," Leribe: the King and the Cardinal." In spite of all this I found sections of the first half of his book to be rather annoying; hence this article. |
» | Lesotho - Population Census 1966 |