| | Ravan Press have been largely responsible for the revival of radical publishing in South Africa. Unlike the established British and South African publishers, they have faced the risks, and costs, of South African censorship and published poetry, short stories, novels, plays, as well as non-fiction books by black and white authors. Since 1974, also under the cloud of state censorship and the banning of activists and authors, the South African Labour Bulletin has documented and analysed workers struggles and the response of capital and the state, and published articles which recover for contemporary readers the complex and repressed history of working class struggles in South Africa. In this volume, Ravan Press publish a series of essays on South African labour history. |