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Spiritual autobiography : Romanticism and the slave narrativesThomas, Helen Sarah January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Cultural and religious barriers to learning in basic astronomy : A South African studyCameron, Ann Kathleen 25 November 2008 (has links)
Studies in astronomy education have shown that socio-cultural factors combine with
everyday human experience to create learning difficulties that are unique to this field. The
history of astronomy also shows a complex link between science and religion. The
foundations of modern astronomy lie in religious beliefs and practices, but over time, in
the West, as science grew ever more powerful in explaining the apparently mechanistic
processes of nature, the beliefs and understanding associated with scientific explanations
came into conflict with those of the Christian church. In Africa, Western religious and
scientific beliefs were brought by the missionaries, and imposed onto already existing
beliefs systems. From colonial times to the present, Western knowledge has been
privileged over local knowledge in African formal schooling. Little recognition has been
given to the learning difficulties that may be caused in situations where the knowledge
system taught at school is different to that imbibed through home and culture.
The difficulties of epistemic access have been highlighted through the development of
socio-cultural constructivist theories of learning. This study, which is based on the sociocultural
constructivist theories of cultural border crossing and collateral learning,
represents an investigation of the learning difficulties experienced by South African first
year university students who study a compulsory course in basic astronomy called 'The
Earth in Space'. The sample was thus a convenience sample, made up of 191 students
who took the course between 2000 and 2004.
The investigation was carried out using a pre-instruction questionnaire to record the precourse
knowledge of the students. The questions that were asked focused on knowledge
related to some of the key concepts in basic astronomy, such as an understanding of the
nature of stars, the rotation and revolution of the earth and the phases of the moon.
These questions had the dual purpose of benchmarking South African students'
knowledge of the scientific explanations for these phenomena against similar international
studies, as well as establishing the prevalence of cultural or traditional ideas held by
these students. After the course had been completed, a post instruction questionnaire
was used to establish students’ views on the difficulties they had experienced in learning
in the course. This was followed up by semi-structured interviews with 25 of the students.
The data obtained from the questionnaires were analysed using two methods: the first
used a deductive coding system where the students’ responses were allocated to chosen
categories, i.e. whether they conformed to the explanations of Western Modern Science
or to cultural knowledge and beliefs, or both. The second method used a computer
software programme, Atlas.ti, where each statement made by the student was recorded
and coded, leading to an inductive, fine-grained analysis of their responses.
The results from the pre-instruction questionnaire indicated that South African students
display similar poor levels of knowledge in this field, to students from other Western and
non-Western countries. The explanation for this lies in the fact that understanding the
scientific explanations requires the ability to think abstractly, and to be able to construct
complex mental models, in situations where the processes involved run counter to normal
daily experience. However, the explanations given by the South African students also
indicated that there were epistemological and ontological issues, related to conflicting
beliefs in terms of culture and religion, which exacerbated the barriers to border crossing in this field. However, the data indicated that students did not find it as difficult to cross
the barriers created by cultural or traditional beliefs as those caused by fundamentalist
Christian beliefs. The biggest obstacle to learning related to conflict between creationist
and scientific accounts of the formation of the Earth and Universe. While this is not
unusual, as shown by studies carried out in the United States, where religious students
are also affected by the apparent conflict between Christianity and science, the most
significant finding of this study related to the existence and extent of this conflict in Black
African students.
In post-1994 South Africa, the revision of the national education system has resulted in a
science curriculum that recognizes 'other ways of knowing'. These refer specifically,
however, to Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS) rather than religious beliefs. The
curriculum does not acknowledge that African ontology is religious. It also does not
recognize the duality of this ontology in terms of African Traditional Religion and
Christianity, which is the stated religion of the majority of Black South Africans. The
findings of this study indicate that because of the nature of African philosophy, religious
ways of knowing need to be explicitly acknowledged as one of the 'other ways of
knowing'. Such acknowledgement by science teachers and lecturers would help to
prevent these different knowledge systems from being discarded or compartmentalized,
which was found to lead either to the promotion of scientism, or to the preclusion of
meaningful engagement with science.
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Psychology and psychotherapy redefined from the view point of the African experienceBaloyi, Lesiba 30 November 2008 (has links)
To date, the vast literature on theories of psychology, and psychology as a practice, still
remains a reflection of Western experiences and conceptions of reality. This is so despite
"psychology" and "psychotherapy" being studied and implemented by Africans, dealing with
Africa's existential issues, in Africa. In this context, a distorted impression that positions
psychology and psychotherapy as irreplaceable and irrefutable Western discoveries is created.
This perception creates a tendency in which psychotherapists adopt and use universalised, foreign
and imposed theories to explain and deal with African cultural experiences.
In recent years, African scholars' quest to advance "African-brewed" conceptions, definitions
and practices of "psychology" and "psychotherapy" is gaining momentum. Psychologists dealing
with African clients are increasingly confronted with the difficulty, and in some instances the
impossibility, of communicating with, and treating local clients using Western conceptions and
theories. Adopting the dominant Western epistemological and scientific paradigms constitutes
epistemological oppression and alienation. Instead, African conceptions, definitions and practices
of "psychology" and "psychotherapy" based on African cultural experiences, epistemology and
ontology are argued for.
The thesis defended in this study is that the dominant Western paradigm of scientific
knowledge in general and, psychology in particular, is anchored in a defective claim to neutrality,
objectivity and universality. To demonstrate this, indigenous ways of knowing and doing in the
African experience are counterpoised against the Western understanding and construction of
scientific knowledge in the fields of psychology and psychotherapy. The conclusion arising from
our demonstration is the imperative to rethink psychology and psychotherapy in order to (i)
affirm the validity of indigenous African ways of knowing and doing; (ii) show that the exclusion
of the indigenous African ways of knowing and doing from the Western paradigm illustrates the
tenuous and questionable character of its epistemological and methodological claims to
neutrality, objectivity and universality. Indeed the Western claim to scientific knowledge, as
described, speaks to its universality at the expense of the ineradicable as well as irreducible
v
ontological pluriversality of the human experience. This study's aim is to advance the argument
for the sensitivity to pluriversality of be-ing and the imperative for wholistic thinking. / Psychology / D. Phil. (Psychology)
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Identity, from autobiography to postcoloniality : a study of representations in Puleng's worksMokgoatsana, Sekgothe Ngwato Cedric 06 1900 (has links)
The issue of identity is receiving the most attention in recent times. Communities,
groups and individuals tend to ask themselves who they are after the colonial period.
The dawn of modern democracy and the fall of the Berlin Wall have become important
sites of self-definition. In this study, I examine narratives of self-invention and selflegitimisation
from a variety of texts ranging from poetic to dramatic voices. The
author creates characters who represent his wishes, desires and fears in dramatic form.
The other characters re-present the other members of his family. He uses
autobiographical voices to re-create and re-present history, particularly his family
history which has been dismembered by memory's inability to recover the past in its
entirety. Memory, visions and dreams are used as tropes to negotiate the pain of loss.
These narratives assist him to recapture that which has been lost dearly, and
imaginatively re-members what has been dismembered. The autobiographical I shifts
into an autobiographical we where the author uses his poetry to lambast the injustices
of apartheid.
The study further examines some aspects of postcolonial identity, which include the
status of African writing and the role of africalogical discourse, the conception of home
in apartheid South Africa as well as the juxtaposition of power between indigenes and
settlers. These reflect the problem of marginality as a postcolonial condition and how
the marginals can be returned to the centre of power. Marginalisation of the indigenes
occurs by coercion, inferiorisation, tabooing certain political and cartographical spaces,
harassment, torture and imprisonment. Despite these measures, the poetry of NS
Puleng persisted to remove the fetish of apartheid disempowerment and
disenfranchisement. / African Languages / D.Litt. et Phil. (African Languages)
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Exploring black rural Bushbuckridge women’s constructions and perceptions of the practice of abortionMolobela, Lien 02 1900 (has links)
Abortion is a publicly contentious topic as it speaks to and draws on localized understandings of body politics, abortion beliefs, women’s role in society, the sanctity of life, and the role of the state. South Africa’s liberal abortion law has led to the removal of abortion restrictions at the macro-structural level. However, cultural and religious constraints at individual and community levels continue to exist as barriers to women’s access to safe abortion which may put women’s lives at risk. These constraints to safe abortion were explored through giving attention to the context of the participants so as to comprehend the nature of the resistance as well as to understand constructions and perceptions of abortion. This study used a combination of frameworks: the African epistemologies, Judith Butler’s performativity theory and Foucault’s notion of power. Data was collected through individual interviews and focus group conversations with women aged 25-40 in a rural Bushbuckridge area of South Africa and analyzed using Parker’s discourse analysis approach. The results of the study revealed competing and contradicting discourses which provide multiple voices and realities. It highlighted discourses that emanate from African traditional epistemologies that view abortion as a taboo that is punishable by draught and shortage of agricultural products, illness, infertility and contamination of the body, which require ritual performances to alleviate. Furthermore, the findings showed the complexities of sexual reproductive decisions by alluding to conditions of poverty; gender based violence, gendered power relations as well as economic inequality. The findings of this study challenge us to be open-minded and mindful of other realities as scholars, policy makers and advocates of change in order to bring about meaningful and acceptable context appropriate change. / Psychology / M.A. (Psychology: Research Consultation)
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Psychology and psychotherapy redefined from the view point of the African experienceBaloyi, Lesiba 30 November 2008 (has links)
To date, the vast literature on theories of psychology, and psychology as a practice, still
remains a reflection of Western experiences and conceptions of reality. This is so despite
"psychology" and "psychotherapy" being studied and implemented by Africans, dealing with
Africa's existential issues, in Africa. In this context, a distorted impression that positions
psychology and psychotherapy as irreplaceable and irrefutable Western discoveries is created.
This perception creates a tendency in which psychotherapists adopt and use universalised, foreign
and imposed theories to explain and deal with African cultural experiences.
In recent years, African scholars' quest to advance "African-brewed" conceptions, definitions
and practices of "psychology" and "psychotherapy" is gaining momentum. Psychologists dealing
with African clients are increasingly confronted with the difficulty, and in some instances the
impossibility, of communicating with, and treating local clients using Western conceptions and
theories. Adopting the dominant Western epistemological and scientific paradigms constitutes
epistemological oppression and alienation. Instead, African conceptions, definitions and practices
of "psychology" and "psychotherapy" based on African cultural experiences, epistemology and
ontology are argued for.
The thesis defended in this study is that the dominant Western paradigm of scientific
knowledge in general and, psychology in particular, is anchored in a defective claim to neutrality,
objectivity and universality. To demonstrate this, indigenous ways of knowing and doing in the
African experience are counterpoised against the Western understanding and construction of
scientific knowledge in the fields of psychology and psychotherapy. The conclusion arising from
our demonstration is the imperative to rethink psychology and psychotherapy in order to (i)
affirm the validity of indigenous African ways of knowing and doing; (ii) show that the exclusion
of the indigenous African ways of knowing and doing from the Western paradigm illustrates the
tenuous and questionable character of its epistemological and methodological claims to
neutrality, objectivity and universality. Indeed the Western claim to scientific knowledge, as
described, speaks to its universality at the expense of the ineradicable as well as irreducible
v
ontological pluriversality of the human experience. This study's aim is to advance the argument
for the sensitivity to pluriversality of be-ing and the imperative for wholistic thinking. / Psychology / D. Phil. (Psychology)
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Identity, from autobiography to postcoloniality : a study of representations in Puleng's worksMokgoatsana, Sekgothe Ngwato Cedric 06 1900 (has links)
The issue of identity is receiving the most attention in recent times. Communities,
groups and individuals tend to ask themselves who they are after the colonial period.
The dawn of modern democracy and the fall of the Berlin Wall have become important
sites of self-definition. In this study, I examine narratives of self-invention and selflegitimisation
from a variety of texts ranging from poetic to dramatic voices. The
author creates characters who represent his wishes, desires and fears in dramatic form.
The other characters re-present the other members of his family. He uses
autobiographical voices to re-create and re-present history, particularly his family
history which has been dismembered by memory's inability to recover the past in its
entirety. Memory, visions and dreams are used as tropes to negotiate the pain of loss.
These narratives assist him to recapture that which has been lost dearly, and
imaginatively re-members what has been dismembered. The autobiographical I shifts
into an autobiographical we where the author uses his poetry to lambast the injustices
of apartheid.
The study further examines some aspects of postcolonial identity, which include the
status of African writing and the role of africalogical discourse, the conception of home
in apartheid South Africa as well as the juxtaposition of power between indigenes and
settlers. These reflect the problem of marginality as a postcolonial condition and how
the marginals can be returned to the centre of power. Marginalisation of the indigenes
occurs by coercion, inferiorisation, tabooing certain political and cartographical spaces,
harassment, torture and imprisonment. Despite these measures, the poetry of NS
Puleng persisted to remove the fetish of apartheid disempowerment and
disenfranchisement. / African Languages / D.Litt. et Phil. (African Languages)
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Personal experiences of victims of violent crimes: an African perspectiveMpata, Modjadji Fletta 02 1900 (has links)
This research focused on the personal experiences of both male and female victims of violent crimes. The aim of this research was to explore how indigenous Black South Africans understand and deal with victimisation. An African epistemology was used to help gain a deeper understanding of the experiences of the participants. Participants were recruited using purposive sampling strategy. Five participants were selected for this study. Data was collected using individual face-to-face semi-structured interviews. Based on the transcribed data, themes were extracted and analysed using content analysis. The results indicate that participants attributed varying meanings to their victimisation. / Psychology / M. A. (Clinical Psychology)
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Towards the cattle economy: understanding the different economic logic of stokvels at Esihlengeni in Vryheid, Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa / Ekubuyeleni Kumnotho Wezinkomo: Ukuqondisisa Indlela Ehlukile Yonmotho Wezitokofela eSihlengeni esiseFilidi, KwaZulu-Natali, eNingizimu Afrika / Go ya go ekonomi ya dikgomo: go kwešiša lotšiki ya ekonomi ye e fapanego ya ditokofele kua Esihlengeni go la Vryheid, Kwazulu-Natal, Afrika Borwa / U livha kha ikonomi ya kholomo: u pfesesa ikonomi dzo thevhekano dza ikonomi dzo fhambanaho dza zwiṱokofela zwa Esihlengeni ngei Vryheid, Kwazulu-Natal, Afrika TshipembeRadebe, Nompumelelo Zodwa 01 1900 (has links)
Text in English with abstracts in English, isiZulu, Northern Sotho and Tshivenda / This study explores the phenomenon of stokvels − membership-based savings schemes providing for the social and financial wellbeing of their members as well as entertainment (Lukhele, 1990). The purpose of the study is to identify the existence of a different kind of economy that is not informed by the capitalist logic. The study aims to examine the values that underpin stokvels and to locate them within a particular socio-cultural and historical context. This is a qualitative research study and my research approach included fieldwork, participant observation, in-depth interviews and the procedure of genealogy. The study, employing these methods, has enabled me to draw a connection between the Khumalo clan - the generation of Mzilikazi Khumalo who was a friend to King Shaka and is argued to have played a pivotal role in building what is known as the Zulu nation today – and my uncles. In the six months I spent at Esihlengeni, a small village in Vryheid, KwaZulu-Natal, I interviewed 27 people, attended two funerals, one family ritual and conducted two focus group discussions with stokvel women. I found that stokvels are not centred on an African epistemic framework as anticipated in the problem statement but are still within the capitalist logic of profit and thus do not draw from the community’s traditional values. While stokvels are informed by the dominant capitalist logic, the community of Esihlengeni still draws from their cosmological worldview that provides them with a different understanding of the economy that is centred on cattle – the means that allow them to perform rituals that guarantee protection and continuity of life - to make sense of their world. Their insistence on the importance of cattle in this community is their cry to be allowed to exist and be recognised as humans that can think for themselves. I conclude by arguing that to understand this community correctly, we need to take the ontological difference seriously that we cannot possibly have only one way of existing. The community of Esihlengeni thus provides us with the economic theory that is centred on life in its totality – that takes both the physical and metaphysical into consideration to ensure the continuity of life. As such, the community of Esihlengeni should be regarded as a gift to be appreciated. / Lolucwaningo luhlaziya isimo sezitokofela – uhlelo lokonga olunika abayingxenye yalo ukweseka kwezomphakathi, ezomnotho nezokuzijabulisa (Lukhele 1990). Ingqikimba yokwenza lolucwaningo ukubonisa ubukhona bomnnotho ohlukile, ongatshelwa wumnotho ogxile kwinzuzo, phecelezi ikhephithalizimu. Injongo yalolucwaningo ukuhlolisisa izimiso ezisekela amastokofela nokuwabeka endaweni ethize yezinhlalo zomphakathi-namasiko kanye nomlando. Lolucwaningo lugxile kwizizathu zokuba yingxenye kuloluhlelo, indlela yokuthola imininingwane ixhumanisa ukuchitha isikhathi nabantu, ukubamba ingxenye kwizinto abazenzayo, ukubabuza imibuzo ejulile, nokudweba imvelaphi yabo. Kulolucwaningo, ngokusebenzisa lezizindlela zokucwaninga, ngakwazi ukuxhumanisa isizwe sakwaKhumalo – inzalo yenkosi uMzilikazi Khumalo owaye umngani wenkosi uShaka futhi kuthiwa wabamba iqhaza eliqavile ekwakheni isizwe esaziwa njengamaZulu namhlanje – nomalume bami. Ezinyangeni eziyisithupha engazicitha eSihlengeni - isigodi esiseFilidili KwaZulu-Natali, ngaba nendabangxoxiswano nabantu amangamashumi amabili nesikhombisa, ngaya emingcwabeni emibili nasembenzini owodwa womndeni, ngase ngikhulumisana namaqoqo amabili omama besitokofela. Ngathola ukuthi izitokofela azizinzile kwinqubomigomo yesintu njengoba ngangisola esitatimendeni socwaningo, kodwa angaphakathi komnotho ogxile kwinzuzo, ikhephithalizimi, ngakhoke awasebenzisi imikhuba yesintu yalomphakathi. Noma amastokofela egxile kumnotho oqgamile ogxile kwinzuzo, lomphakathi waseSihlengeni usasebenzisa indlela yawo yokuphila eveza inqubomgomo ehlukile yomnotho ogxile ezinkomeni - eziyisisekelo sokwenza amasiko aqinekisa ukuvikeleka nenqubekela phambili yempilo – ukuqondisisa imvelo. Ukuphikelela kokubaluleka kwezinkomo kulomphakathi isikhalo sokuthi uvumeleke ukuba aphile futhi ubonwe njengabantu abakwaziyo ukuzicabangela. Ngiphetha ngokuthi ukuqondisisa lomphakathi kahle, kumele sithathe ukuhlukana kwezizwe okuyimvelo yempilo ngokuzimisela, ukuthi kungenzeke kube nendlela eyodwa yokuphila. Umphakathi waseSihlengeni ngakhoke usinika inqubomugomo yomnotho egxile empilweni ngokuphelela kwayo – uthatha okubonakalayo nokungabonakali ukuqiniseka kokuqhubekela phambili kwempilo. Kanjaloke, umphakathi waseSihlengeni kumele ubonakale njengesipho okumelwe sibungazwe. / Nyakišišo ye e bolela ka ditokofele – dikema tša polokelo tša go thewa godimo ga boleloko go dira gore maloko a tšona a be le boiketlo go tša leago, matlotlo le boithabišo (Lukhele, 1990). Morero wa nyakišišo ye ke go hlaola go ba gona ga mehuta ya go fapana ya ekonomi yeo e sa huetšwego ke lotšiki ya bokepitale. Maikemišetšo a nyakišišo ke go lekola melawana yeo e thekgago ditokofele le go di bea ka gare ga maemo a itšeng a histori, a leago le a setšo. Ye ke nyakišišo ya khwalithethifi gomme sebopego sa nyakišišo ya ka se akaretša tlhohlomišo, temošo ya bakgathatema, dipoledišano tša go tsenelela le tshepedišo ya tšinealotši. Nyakišišo, ya go šomiša mekgwa ye, e nkgontšhitše go laetša kamano gare ga lešika la ga Khumalo ‒ moloko wa Mzilikazi Khumalo yoo a bego e le mogwera wa Kgošikgolo Shaka gape o dumelwa go ba a bapetše karolo ye bohlokwa kagong ya seo lehono se tsebjago bjalo ka setšhaba sa Mazulu ‒ le bomalome ba ka. Mo dikgweding tše tshela tše ke di feditšego Esihlengeni, motse wo monyane go la Vryheid, KwaZulu-Natal, ke boledišane le batho ba 27, ke tsenetše ditirelo tše pedi tša poloko, moetlo o tee wa lapa le go swara dipoledišano tše pedi tša go lebantšha sehlopha gotee le basadi ba setokofele. Ke hweditše gore ditokofele ga di latele foreimiweke ya epistemiki ya Afrika bjalo ka ge go letetšwe ka gare ga tlhalošo ya taba eupša di sa le ka gare ga lotšiki ya bokepitale ya poelo gomme ka go realo ga di latele ditumelo tša setšo tša setšhaba. Mola ditokofele di latela lotšiki ya bokepitale ye e bušago, setšhaba sa Esihlengeni se sa ntše se latela pono ya sona ya kosmolotši ya lefase yeo e ba fago kwešišo ye e fapanego ya ekonomi ya go thewa godimo ga dikgomo – mokgwa wo o ba dumelelago go phetha moetlo wa go tiišetša tšhireletšo le tšwelopele ya bophelo – go kwešiša lefase la bona. Phegelelo ya bona go bohlokwa bja dikgomo ka setšhabeng se ke sello sa bona sa gore ba dumelelwe go ba gona le go amogelwa bjalo ka batho bao ba kago inaganela. Ke fetša ka gore go kwešiša setšhaba se e le ka nnete, re nyaka go tšea kgopolo ya ontolotši bjalo ka ye bohlokwa ya gore re ka se kgonego ba fela le tsela e tee ya go phela. Setšhaba sa Esihlengeni ka go realo se re fa teori ya ekonomi yeo e theilwego godimo ga bophelo ka moka ga bjona – seo se akaretša bobedi fisikale le metafisikale go kgonthišiša tšwelopele ya bophelo. Bjalo, setšhaba sa Esihlengeni se swanela go tšewa bjalo ka mpho ye e amogelwago. / Ngudo iyi i tandula tshibveleli tsha zwiṱokofela − vhuraḓo ho ḓisendekaho nga zwikimu zwa u vhulunga u itela u dzudzanyea nga tshitshavha na lwa masheleni kha miraḓo khathihi na vhuḓimvumvusi (Lukhele, 1990). Ndivho ya ngudo ndi u topola u vha hone ha tshaka dzo fhambanaho dza ikonomi dzine dza sa ḓivhadzwe nga thevhekano ya pfuma. Ngudo yo pika u ṱola zwithu zwa ndeme zwo tikaho zwiṱokofela na u u wana vhukati hazwo nyimele ya matshilisano na mvelelo kathihi na ḓivhazwakale. Hei ndi ngudo ya ṱhoḓisiso ya ndeme na nyolo ya ṱhoḓisiso yanga yo katela mushumo wa nnḓa, u sedza vhadzheneli, inthaviwu dzo dzhenelelaho na kuitele kwa vhutumbukwa. Ngudo dzi shumisaho ngona idzi, dzo nkonisa u vhona vhuṱumani vhukati ha lushaka lwa ha Khumalo ‒ murafho wa ha Mzilikazi Khumalo we wa vha u khonani dza Khosi Shaka nahone hu pfi wo shela mulenzhe zwihulwane kha u fhaṱa zwi vhidzwaho uri lushaka lwa ha Zulu ṋamusi ‒ na vhomalume anga. Kha miṅwedzi ya rathi ye nda I fhedza ngei Esihlengeni, kuḓana ku re kha ḽa Vryheid, KwaZulu-Natal, ndo inthaviwa vhathu vha 27, nda dzhenela mbulungo mbili, nyitelatherelo nthihi ya muṱa na tshimbidza nyambedzano dza zwigwada zwo sedzaho mbili na vhafumakadzi vha zwiṱokofela. Ndo wana uri zwiṱokofela a zwo ngo ḓisendeka nga muhanga wa nḓivho ya Afrika sa zwe zwa lavhelelwa kha tshitatamende tsha thaidzo fhedzi hu kha ḓi vha nga ngomu ha thevhekano ya pfuma ya u bindula zwenezwo a zwo bvi kha zwithu zwa ndeme zwa sialala zwa tshitshavha. Musi zwiṱokofela zwi tshi ḓivhadzwa nga thevhekano thakhulwa ya pfuma, tshitshavha tsha Esihlengeni tshi kha ḓi dzhia u bva kha kuvhonele kwa mvelo kwa ḽifhasi ku vha ṋekedzaho kupfesesele kwo fhambanaho lwa ikonomi yo ḓisendekaho nga kholomo – nḓila ine ya vha tendela u shuma nyitelatherelo dzavho zwi themendelaho tsireledzo na u bvelaphanḓa ha vhutshilo – u itela u pfesesa ḽifhasi ḽavho. U omelela kha ndeme ya kholomo kha tshitshavha itshi sa tshililo tshavho tsha u tendelwa u vha hone na u dzhielwa nṱha sa vhathu vhane vha kona u ḓihumbulela. Ndi pendela nga u amba uri u itela u pfesesa tshoṱhe tshitshavha itshi ri tea u dzhia kuvhonele kwa zwa mvumbo ro khwaṱhisa uri ri sa tou vha na nḓila nthihi fhedzi ya u vha hone. Tshitshavha tsha Esihlengeni zwenezwo tshi ri fha thyori ya ikonomi yo ḓisendekaho nga vhutshilo ho fhelelaho – hezwo zwi dzhiela nṱha zwa muvhili na zwa khumbulelwa u khwaṱhisedza u bvelaphanḓa ha vhutshilo. Zwenezwo, tshitshavha tsha Esihlengeni tshi tea u dzhiiwa sa tshifhiwa tsho tewaho nga dzindivhuwo. / Anthropology and Archaeology / D. Phil. (Anthropology)
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Personal experiences of victims of violent crimes: an African perspectiveMpata, Modjadji Fletta 02 1900 (has links)
This research focused on the personal experiences of both male and female victims of violent crimes. The aim of this research was to explore how indigenous Black South Africans understand and deal with victimisation. An African epistemology was used to help gain a deeper understanding of the experiences of the participants. Participants were recruited using purposive sampling strategy. Five participants were selected for this study. Data was collected using individual face-to-face semi-structured interviews. Based on the transcribed data, themes were extracted and analysed using content analysis. The results indicate that participants attributed varying meanings to their victimisation. / Psychology / M. A. (Clinical Psychology)
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