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Boxers Die Alone: Reflections On Boxing In The Eastern Cape (Trade Paperback)

by Njabulo S. Ndebele
ISBN: 9780639881720
Product in Stock: No
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Original price R 380.00
Original price R 380.00 - Original price R 380.00
Original price R 380.00
Current price R 342.00
R 342.00 - R 342.00
Current price R 342.00
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PRE-ORDER NOW! The estimated release date is 16 October 2026. Please note your complete order will only ship once the Pre-Order item becomes available.

Between 1970 and 2010, an area just 45.55 square metres in size in the Eastern Cape  produced an astonishing 22 boxing world champions and 50 national champions. That  place was Mdantsane. Described as ‘The Mecca of Boxing in South Africa’, this single community has accounted for 33 per cent of South African boxing world champions since  the 1920s.

Driven by a lifelong fascination with the sport, in Boxers Die Alone Prof Njabulo S. Ndebele applies his intellectual and philosophical mind to this phenomenon – how it came about  and whether it still applies today. He steps past the modern technology that allows us to  stream fights in real time, choosing instead to delve deep into the origin story of a  township that was constructed intentionally to provide Black labour to a white town. The  historical roots of displacement and familiar struggles to find a way out of poverty make  the Mdantsane boxing legends all the more extraordinary.

Three champions across three generations are singled out for review – Nkosana ‘Happy  Boy’ Mgxaji, Vuyani ‘The Beast’ Bungu and Nkosonathi ‘Mabhere’ Joyi. Prof Ndebele brings them vividly to life in a celebration of their triumphant successes against the odds of their  circumstances. With sensitivity and insight, he meticulously unpicks the strands of their  stories, including their inspiration and aspirations, training routines, the development of  their unique boxing styles, their role model status for neighbourhood youngsters, and the vital yet often problematic relationships boxers have with their trainers and managers.

While the facts and figures are illuminating in themselves, it is the intellectual beam that  Prof Ndebele shines on Mdantsane and its boxing tradition that elevates Boxers Die Alone  to much more than a book about boxing. It broadens the audience to readers interested in history, community and the making of greatness.

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