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Amakrwala experiences as learners in a Buffalo City secondary school: implications for school leadership and managementDuka-Ntshweni, Nomonde January 2013 (has links)
‘Ulwaluko’ (the male initiation custom) has been practised for generations by many cultures in South Africa and in Africa as a whole. AmaXhosa are amongst the population groups in South Africa within whom this custom has survived pre colonially and through the colonial and apartheid eras up to the current democracy. While this custom was reserved for older, mature and senior boys in the past, there is evidence that nowadays immature and junior boys as young as 12 years are taken to the initiation school. This study sought to understand how these newly graduated initiated men (amakrwala) cope with their multifaceted identities, as learners in a secondary school and as adults in the community. The study also seeks to explore a leadership style that can be sensitive to the needs of ‘amakrwala’ at school. This is a qualitative study which used interpretivism as the research paradigm. Phenomenology is the research design and phenomenological interviews were used as the data gathering tools. The findings reveal that there are tensions that exist between modernity and tradition in socialising amakrwala. The school represents the modern space and the home and community are the traditional spaces. In the formal school environment there is minimal or no recognition of the new identity of the ‘amakrwala’. At school ‘amakrwala’ are seen as learners. Their identity and status remain unchanged from what they were before they went to the initiation school. However, in the community and at home, they are elevated from a childhood to an adult status and their identities are thus re-shaped.
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Factors influencing household solid waste management practices at Ha-Mandiwana Village, Makhado Municipality, South AfricaMandiwana, Charity Mashudu 05 1900 (has links)
MPH / Department of Public Health / See the attached abstract below
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Consequences of On-going Transitional Rites on Youth Morality in Thulamela Municipality, South AfricaBassey, Rofem Inyang 20 September 2019 (has links)
MAAS / Department of African Studies / This study analysed the consequences of the on-going transitional rites on youth morality in the Thulamela Municipality, South Africa, using a qualitative descriptive design. The participants were sampled using a non-random sampling procedure, specifically, a purposive sampling technique and snowball sampling technique. A semi-structured interview guide was used to collect data from the Indigenous Knowledge (IK) custodians, the parents of the youths and the youths until point of saturation. The analysis was performed using a thematic content method. With the emergence of themes and sub-themes, broad categories were generated to differentiate and explain the thoughts expressed by the various respondents and the observations made in the field. The study findings suggest that the on-going transitional rites is mark by weekend’s social activities with the practice of substance use and abuse among the youth’s in recreational spot. The transitional rites are structured under guise of “freaks” as an evolve culture among the youths. The freaks culture is a counterculture of the usual initiation’s schools for transitional rites of passage which instil morality among youths. The emerged findings comprehensively show that the on-going transitional rites effect inappropriate youth morality. This study concluded that the on-going transitional rites activities and practices evolved as a current socialization standard for quick maturity status, as a result of that, it will be harder to provide a complete change of this evolving culture. However, what will work is to build on the exciting transitional rites of passage to moderate appropriate youths’ morality in Thulamela communities. / NRF
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Naming and praises of Amasokana among the Southern amaNdebele during the initiation processMokoena, Matthews January 2020 (has links)
Text has abstracts in English and isiNdebele languages / This study focused on the naming and praises of amasokana (initiates) among the South
African amaNdebele during and after the initiation process. An explanation is offered as to
why amasokana of amaNdebele use Sepedi names instead of isiNdebele names during
their transition from boyhood to manhood. Using critical language awareness, this study
examined names and praises based on the cultural and traditional poetic forms recited by
the amasokana during their homecoming ceremonies when they are introduced to their
community by their post-initiation names. This is a case study that made use of interviews
and observations as instruments to acquire data about the naming practices and praises
of the amasokana of the amaNdebele. The research aims to make a meaningful
contribution to the recording and preservation of the indigenous names of amasokana and
their praises for posterity and to sustain cultural identity and the quintessential elements of
humanity. / Irhubhululo leli linqophe ekuthiyweni kwamabizo kanye neembongweni zamasokana
wamaNdebele eSewula Afrika ngesikhathi nangemva kwengoma. Isendlalelo siqale
khulu ekutheni kubayini amasokana wamaNdebele asebenzisa amabizo weSepedi
esikhundleni samabizo wesiNdebele ngesikhathi lokha nakasuka ebusaneni aya
ebudodeni. Kilelirhubhululo, kuhlolwe amabizo kanye neembongo ngokuqalisa eendleleni
ezibukondlo zangokwesiko kanye nomkhuba wokubonga kwamasokana nakagodukako
lokha nakazazisa ngamabizo wabo wobusokana. Ngalokho- ke amabizo wendabuko
wamasokana kanye neembongo kufanele kurekhodwe, kubulungwe ukuze kubulungwe
ubunjalo besiko kanye neengcenye eziqakathekileko zobuntu. / African Languages / M.A. (African Languages)
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Both sides of the camera: anthropology and video in the study of a Gcaleka women's rite called Intonjane.Cloete, Laura 09 February 2015 (has links)
This thesis explores the potential of video as a research
tool for anthropologists in the recording of a single
ritual. The study examines interactions between
ethnographers, informants and viewers. The thesis
reveals the capacity of video to make possible close,
detailed readings of performance in terms not originally
anticipated by the researcher. Archival storage of the
video recording allows for critique and assessment of the
research.
The case study chosen in which to test the potential of
\ dcso as a research tool was a woman's 'initiation'
r^L'ial (called inton jane) in Shixini in the Eastern Gape
(in what was, until recently, the independent homeland of
Transkei). Historically, the ritual was supposedly held
at the time of a girl's first menstruation, this being
the physical symbol of her transformation into adulthood.
Ritual seclusion served to effect an accompanying social
transformation in preparation for marriage.
Paradoxically, in the late 1980's, it was older women and
mothers, already married and well past the age of first
menstruation, who were undergoing the ritual seclusion
and symbolic marriage. The study explores this paradox
with the goal of understanding the purpose of the ritual
in contemporary times. By recording large segments of
the ritual on video, and subjecting the footage to a
close analysis of verbal and non-verbal aspects of
performance, both the ritual and the merits of video as
a research tool could be examined.
Video was utilised, in an interactive research process,
as an information elicitation tool. The analysis of the
recorded text of the ritual brings to the fore elements
which make what is apparently a paradox understandable.
The elements which explicate the paradox were not
anticipated when the research commenced, and in all
likelihood would have eluded a researcher who did not
have the benefit of the incidental capture on video. The
thesis reveals the enormous Contribution video can make
to research and suggests that video has an important
contribution to make to the discipline of anthropology.
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Grave rites and grave rights: anthropological study of the removal of farm graves in northern peri-urban JohannesburgHill, Cherry Ann 02 1900 (has links)
Text in English / In a diachronic and multi-sited study that extended from 2004 through
2012/2013 I deconstructed the sociocultural dynamics of relocating farm graves
from the farm Zevenfontein in northern peri-urban Johannesburg. The graves at
the focus of the study were some seventy-six graves removed from a northern
portion of the farm in 2004 for a huge development project that commenced
construction in 2010, and other graves removed in the 1980s from portions of
the farm developed for residential estates in the 1990s.
The study explored the people who dwelt on the farm and created the
graveyards, the religious processes entailed in relocating the mortal remains of
ancestors, the mortuary processes of exhuming and reburying ancestors, the
disputations between and negotiating processes of landowners and grave
owners, and the demands and demonstrations by farm workers and dwellers
seeking redress for past human and cultural rights infringements.
Although the topic of farm graves is well-referenced in land claims and sense of
place discourses and is not in itself a new topic, this study provides original and
in-depth information and insight on the broader picture of ancestral graves and
their relocation, including the structuring of a community and its leaders and
followers, it suggests answers to the question as to whether ancestral
graves/graveyards can successfully and functionally be relocated. Not only are
religious aspects examined in the study, but also the sociopolitical and economic
dimensions of relocating graves are fully scrutinised in the context of farm
workers and dwellers’ political awareness of and astuteness to the social and
economic potential of farm graves and their relocation. / Anthropology and Archaeology / M.A. (Anthropology)
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