Ravan Press
Ravan Press, established in 1972 by Peter Ralph Randall, , and Beyers Naudé, was a South African anti-apartheid publishing house.[1]
Ravan Press was initially established to print the reports of the South African Study Project of Christianity in Apartheid Society (Spro-Cas). In 1974 it became a donor-funded oppositional publishing house, specializing in anti-apartheid literature.[1]
In 1984, following its release of Njabulo Ndebele's novel Fools and Other Stories (Staffrider Series, No. 19), Ravan Press won the Noma Award for Publishing in Africa.[2]
In the 1990s Ravan Press was taken over by Pan MacMillan.[3]
Book series published by Ravan Press[]
- Battles of the Anglo-Boers
- New History of Southern Africa
- Ravan Local History
- Ravan Playscripts
- Ravan Writers Series
- Staffrider Series[4]
- Topic Series
References[]
- ^ a b Ravan Press, in Michael F. Suarez, S.J. and H. R. Woudhuysen, The Oxford Companion to the Book, online ed., 2010.
- ^ "A Profile of Ravan Press: 1984 Noma Award Winner", The African Book Publishing Record, Vol. 14, Issue 4, January 1988, p. 231. Retrieved 7 September 2019.
- ^ Nerisha Baldevu, Progressive publishing – the Ravan Press experience, Khanya Journal 24, July 2010.
- ^ Staffrider Series (Ravan Press) - Book Series List, publishinghistory.com. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
Further reading[]
- G. E. De Villiers, Ravan: Twenty-Five Years (1972-1997): A Commemorative Volume of New Writing, Randburg, South Africa: Ravan Press, 1997.
External links[]
- Josh MacPhee, Judging Books by Their Covers 239: Ravan Books, Just Seeds, June 27, 2016.
Categories:
- Publishing companies established in 1972
- Book publishing companies of South Africa
- Anti-Apartheid organisations
- South African companies established in 1972
- Publishing company stubs