Long Walk to Freedom

Long Walk to Freedom

by

Nelson Mandela

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Themes and Colors
Racism and Division Theme Icon
Negotiation, Democracy, and Progress Theme Icon
Nonviolent Protest vs. Violent Protest Theme Icon
The Value of Optimism Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Long Walk to Freedom, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Racism and Division

Nelson Mandela’s Long Walk to Freedom describes Mandela’s life in South Africa primarily during the apartheid era, when racial segregation is an official government policy. As a Black man in the country, Mandela experiences racism in ways big and small, and he also witnesses it happening to others. Mandela first experiences this racism at school and in his law career, when White people try to assert dominance over him by making him do chores…

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Negotiation, Democracy, and Progress

Although today, Nelson Mandela is widely admired for his political and social justice accomplishments, his autobiography Long Walk to Freedom shows how his ideas were controversial in their time, earning many admirers for his bravery but also facing opposition from all sides. Mandela’s primary opponents throughout the book are the Nationalists, a political party in South Africa dedicated to apartheid, a form of legally-sanctioned white supremacy. Although the Nationalists are supposedly democratically elected, only…

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Nonviolent Protest vs. Violent Protest

In Long Walk to Freedom, Nelson Mandela presents himself as a pragmatist, but this can be difficult when he faces moral and strategic questions about the use of force that have no easy answer. Mandela is a great admirer of Mahatma Gandhi, who famously relied on nonviolent forms of protest like civil disobedience, including general strikes and hunger strikes, while protesting British rule of India. But while Mandela finds some success by employing similar…

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The Value of Optimism

Even at the darkest moments of his life, like during his more than 27 years in prison at Robben Island, Pollsmoor, and Victor Verster, Nelson Mandela maintained a sense of optimism, calling himself “fundamentally an optimist.” As Mandela makes clear in his autobiography, it’s possible to be optimistic even while acknowledging the problems and injustices of the world. In fact, Mandela believes that being optimistic is an essential part of his liberation struggle, and…

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