Spelling suggestions: "subject:"south africa - distory"" "subject:"south africa - 1ristory""
291 |
The Federal Party, 1953-1962 : an English-speaking reaction to Afrikaner nationalism.Reid, Brian Lawrence. January 1979 (has links)
No abstract available. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, 1979.
|
292 |
"Living as a Methodist minister in the late twentieth century" : an oral history of Methodist ministers ordained between 1980-1999, with particular reference to clergy serving in the Natal West District.Linscott, Delme Connett. January 2006 (has links)
Very little has been written on the lives of Methodist ministers in Southern Africa. Even less has been written about ministers using oral history as the primary source of information. This paper will seek to capture the stories of some Methodist ministers and then to reflect on their experiences of ministering in the late twentieth century. In order to maintain focus this paper will hone in on the clergy who were ordained in the Methodist Church of Southern Africa between 1980 and 1999. A considerable portion of the initial analysis has been taken from personal interviews with the ministers, focusing mainly on what they have encountered in their ministries. Most of the interviewees are currently serving in the Natal West District, however further valuable feedback has been received from ministers living in other communities around Southern Africa. These thoughts and comments were gathered by means of a questionnaire. This research is further complemented with information gathered by means of a database. This database deals exclusively with all ministers ordained between 1980 and 1999. Making use of simple statistics and comparative figures, a number of results will be reflected upon. This paper will also examine what impact ministerial training has had on the formation of the ministers, as well as their thoughts on further training. Chapters on the burdens of being in the ministry, the effect of politics on the clergy, understanding the reasons for ministers leaving the church and the impact of clergy moving into other forms of ministry have been included. The negative aspects of ministry have been countered by considering the number of blessings of being called into the ministry. This paper will also reflect on what lessons can be learnt from these clergy in order to leave a legacy for future generations of ministers. The ultimate aim of this paper is to give voice to the stories of men and women who have been called to serve God, through the Methodist Church of Southern Africa. It is hoped that the readers of this paper will dignify the oral histories of these ministers and will indeed find them challenging, refreshing, insightful and powerful. / Thesis (M.Th.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2006.
|
293 |
Sounding the body's meridian : signifying community and "the body national" in post-apartheid South African theatre.Mtshali, Mbongeni N. January 2009 (has links)
Sounding the Body’s Meridian examines the ways in which notions of belonging are constructed through the display of bodies in performance, specifically the registers of private and public body that have been revealed in the theatre‟s attempts to locate a post-liberation notion of South African-ness in historical narrative. The author investigates various ideas of the imagined community constructed in postliberation performances of South African history as a form of embodied historical-social intervention. This investigation is undertaken with specific reference to claims that are made of South African identity in terms of its public culture, especially the inscription of nationalist ideology as a performative act that operates both upon and through the „citizen‟ bodies that it mediates. The study pursues a notion of the body so mediated, and (perceived) essential “characteristics” that describe its claims to authority and “authenticity”: the “meridian” or line of essential energy that activates its power to signify on behalf of other bodies like it in the debate and transaction of social values. / Thesis (M.A.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2009.
|
294 |
Claiming sounds, constructing selves : the racial and social imaginaries of South African popular music.Robertson, Mary. January 2005 (has links)
This thesis explores some of the ways in which listening to South African popular music allows individuals to enter into imaginative engagements with others in South Africa, and in so doing, negotiate their place in the social landscape. Taking as its starting point the notion of the "musical imaginary" - the web of connotational meanings arising out of the interaction between music and society, rendering it a particularly suitable medium through which to imagine social actors - it focuses specifically on the role of music in constructions of 'race' and, to a lesser extent, of 'nation'. It examines some of the ways in which dominant discourses exert pressure on what is imagined, as well as highlighting the creativity of listeners who appropriate the musical imaginary for their own ends of identification. It attempts to depict the complexity of musical identification in postapartheid South Africa, in which individuals must negotiate multiple boundaries marking difference, including categories of 'race', ethnicity, gender and class. It also investigates perceptions of the role of music in generating new identities and modes of social interaction, and offers some speculations as to how an analysis of these perceptions may contribute to current theoretical models of change in multicultural societies. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2005.
|
295 |
Local is lekker? : a study of the perceptions of contemporary South African popular music among Durban adolescents at five culturally diverse schools in the greater Durban area.Ralfe, Sarah Isabel. January 2005 (has links)
Is local lekker? This study looks at the perceptions the youth in Durban hold towards
local music. Through a study of the Grade 11 learners at Bonela Secondary, Gelofte
Skool, Hillcrest High School, Thomas More College and Sastri College this research
looks at how much support is offered for local music. It considers how much local
music the respondents listen to, how much they purchase and how many local
concerts they attend.
This study also considers the mediathat the respondents are exposed to,in order to·
discover if any correlation occurs between the media that they are exposed to and
their perception of local music. The impact of globalization and cultural imperialism
on the consumption of local music are also considered. In addition, the study looks
at whether variables such as gender, school, "race" or the home language of the
respondents impact on their support for local music.
Both qualitative and quantitative data was collected. The respondents were required
to respond to a questionnaire which elicited responses concerning their perceptions
of local music, their support for local music and the media that they are exposed to.
From the questionnaires a group of respondents of differing views, genders and
home languages was selected to participate in a focus group interview.
Results show that the respondents support very little in the way of local music, with
regard to listening to local music, purchasing local music and supporting local
concerts. They are exposed to a great deal of foreign material and do not have much
exposure to local products. / Thesis (M.Mus.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2005.
|
296 |
Pennywhistle kwela : a musical, historical and socio-political analysis.Allen, Lara Victoria. January 1993 (has links)
This thesis is an exploration of the history of the pennywhistle in black South African
popular music, the most important style to evolve around this instrument being kwela
music. An analysis of kwela is conducted from several perspectives: historical,
musical, socio-cultural and political.
Chapter I explores the urban South African musical styles which preceded and
influenced kwela. The first of these genres was marabi, which developed in
Johannesburg's slumyards in the first three decades of the this century. Marabi was
followed by tsaba-tsaba in the late thirties, which in tum gave way to the swing influenced
genre of "African Jazz" in the forties.
Chapter II chronologically traces the use of the pennywhistle in urban black South
African popular music. An examination of kwela is preceded by a discussion of the
pennywhistle-and-drum "Scottish" marching bands of the thirties and forties, and the
rhythm-and-blues pennywhistle style of the early fifties. Various venues and their
effect on the performance of kwela are explored, as are the effects of international
recognition on the style's development.
Chapter III comprises an in-depth musical analysis of kwela's stylistic components.
The structure of kwela music and its harmonic, melodic and rhythmic components are
examined. A discussion of kwela's instrumentation includes an examination of the
roles of the guitar, banjo, string bass, drum-set, pennywhistle and saxophone.
Chapter IV is an exploration of the social context and cultural milieu which spawned
and nurtured the development of kwela music. Chapter V examines the relationship
between kwela and South African politics in the fifties. An overview of this political
environment is followed by an examination of the effects of particular apartheid
legislation on the development of music in general and kwela in particular.
Chapter VI concludes with an exploration of the ways in which various interest groups
were able to find meaning and identity in kwela music. Included here, for instance,
are the ways in which kwela contributed to the formation of urban black identity, and
how the style came to have meaning for various white interest groups. Finally, the
meaning of kwela today is considered. / Thesis (M.Mus)-University of Natal, Durban, 1993.
|
297 |
Die skep van aanvaarbare behuising binne die konteks van volhoubare ontwikkelingTerblanche, M. 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MS en S) -- Stellenbosch University, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: South Africa has a housing backlog of approximately 900 000 houses. The
government and non-government organizations tries to provide housing for
the disadvantage people of our land through sustainable development in an
attempt control the housing crises. This study makes the point that
sustainable development not nessereraly means the same as acceptable
development. In order to provide acceptable housing with in the contexts of
sustainable development, it is necessary to give more in depth and equal
consideration to the social, economical and environmental aspects of
sustainable development. This study focus on what is meant by the above
mentioned aspects of sustainable development and what the direct and
indirect impacts will be if it is not taken into consideration during the planning
and construction faze of low-cost housing. Even though this study doesn’t
provide the solutions to providing acceptable housing, it does make a few
suggestions on how to obtain acceptable housing, not only for the people
directly involved but also for the greater community of South Africa. One of
the suggestions that, according to this study, should strongly be considered is
the use of alternative building methods such as straw and clay, not only for
the obvious environmental benefits but also for the economical and social
benefits. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Suid-Afrika sit tans met ’n behuisings-agterstand van ongeveer 900 000
huise. Die regering en nie-regerings organinsasies poog om deur die proses
van volhoubare ontwikkeling, lae-koste behuising vir die behoeftige mense
van die land te voorsien om sodoende die behuisingskrisis aan te spreek.
Hierdie werkstuk maak die standpunt dat volhoubare ontwikkeling nie
noodwendig sinoniem is met aanvaarbare behuising nie. Om aanvaarbare
behuising te voorsien moet die huise binne die raamwerk van volhoubare
ontwikkeling gebou word, maar daar moet meer in diepte gekyk word na, en
gelyke hoeveelheid aandag aan alle sosiale-, ekonomiese- en
omgewingsfaktore gegee word. Die werkstuk kyk in diepte na wat bedoel
word met bogenoemde drie aspekte van volhoubare ontwikkeling en wat die
direkte en indirekte gevolge is as dit nie in ag geneem word tydens die
beplannings- en konstruksiefases van lae-koste behuising nie. Alhoewel die
werkstuk nie defnitiewe oplossings bied vir die voorsiening van aanvaarbare
behuising nie, word ‘n paar voorstelle gemaak van hoe behuisingsprojekte
meer aanvaarbaar gemaak kan word, nie net vir die begunstigdes en
owerhede nie, maar ook vir die res van die samelewing. Een van die
voorstelle wat volgens die werkstuk baie sterk oorweeg behoort te word, is dat
alternatiewe boumetodes (soos strooibale en klei) gebruik moet word, nie net
vir die van selfsprekende ekologiese voordele wat dit inhou nie, maar ook vir
ekonomiese en sosiale voordele.
|
298 |
Die rol van Dr. J. Theophilus Hahn in Suider-Afrika, 1871-1905Hahn, Hildegarde L. 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)-- University Stellenbosch, 1993. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Johann Theophilus Hahn, seun van die Rynse sendeling, J. -Samuel
Hahn, is gebore op die sendingstasie Ebenhaeser (Lutzville) op 24
Desember 1842. As 'n seun op die sendingstasies Ebenaeser en
Bethanien en Berseba in Suidwes-Afrika (Namibie), het hy geleer om
die verskillende Khoisandialekte te praat. Ter wille van sy kinders
se akademiese opleiding het Samuel Hahn in 1852 na Duitsland
teruggekeer. Daar het Theophilus hornas uitstaande student bewys en
in 1870 het hy sy doktorsgraad verwerf met die proefskrif Die
- Sprache der Nama; nebst einem Anhang enthaltend Sprachproben aus
dem Munde des Volkes. Terwyl hy aan die universiteit van Halle
studeer het, het hy 'n aantal etnologiese artikels oor die inheemse
volkere van Suidwes-Afrika (Namibie) geskryf.
Met sy terugkeer na Suid-Afrika in 1871, het hy 'n handelaar in
Suidwes-Afrika geword. Na sy huwelik in 1875 met Marianne Esther de
La Roche Smuts het hy in Rehoboth gaan bly en aldaar 'n handelsaak
begin.
Hahn het Suidwes-Afrika in 1878 verlaat, nadat dit duidelik geword
het dat die Kaapse regering se entoesiasme vir optrede noord van
die Oranjerivier afgeneem het, as gevolg van sy militere probleme
op die oosgrens, in Griekwaland-Wes en Basoetoland. Hy het daarna
by sy broer Johannes, wat Rynse sendeling op Stellenbosch was, gaan
woon. Aldaar het hy die eerste landkaart van Suidwes-Afrika,
Original map of Namaqualand and Damaraland, voltooi.
In 1881 is hy as regeringsfiloloog en bewaarder van die
Grey-versameling in die Suid-Afrikaanse Openbare Biblioteek
(Suid-Afrikaanse Biblioteek) aangestel. Sy aanstelling het
veroorsaak dat die Hooggeregshof deur die Grey-trustees versoek is
om die versameling aan hulle oor te dra en om Hahn te verbied om
met die Grey-versameling in te meng. Die applikasie is deur die
Hooggeregshof van die hand gewys.
Terwyl hy vir die Kaapse regering gewerk het, het hy aan die Cape
Native Laws and Customs Commission inligting omtrent die Nama- en
Herero-kultuur verskaf. Hierdie kommissie was deur die Kaapse
regering aangestel om inligting aangaande die wette en gewoontes
van die inheemse volkere in te win en om verslag te doen aangaande
die wesenlikheid van die instelling van 'n soort stelsel van
plaaslike selfregering in die swart gebiede.
Vanaf sy plaas Prospect Hill het Hahn 'n brief geskryf aan die
agent van Adolf Llideritz,Heinrich Vogelsang, waarin hy waardevolle
inligting oor die moontlikhede van Suidwes-Afrika gemeld het en het
aan die hand gegee dat LlideritzAngra Pequena (Llideritzbaai)vir
handeldoeleindes moes bekom.
In 1883 het hy as regeringsfiloloog en Grey-bibliotekaris bedank en
het toe die plaasbestuurder van Welmoed, in die distrik van
Stellenbosch, geword. As wynboer het hy voorgestel dat n
kooperasie vir die produsering van wyn gestig word, asook spoediger
optrede met die bestryding van die fillokseraplaag.
Met Hahn se hulp het die Kharaskhoma Exploring and Prospecting
Syndicate, 'n maatskappy wat in Londen gebaseer was, in 1890
belangrike konsessies van die Bondelswart- en Velskoendraerkapteins
in Suidwes-Afrika bekom. Dit was 'n monopolie vir die eksploitering
van minerale, regte om handel te dryf en om spoorwee aan te le~
Na die regte van hierdie sindikaat aan die South African
Territories Company .oorgedra is, het Hahn weer Suidwes-Afrika
verlaat en die plaas Blaauwklip (Blaauwklippen) by Stellenbosch
gekoop. Sy pogings om te boer het misluk en die plaas is na sy
bankrotskap aan Cecil John Rhodes verkoop.
Daarna het hy agent vir Equitable Life Assurance Society in
Johannesburg geword. Terwyl hy by Markstraat 206, Johannesburg
gewoon het, het hy onsuksesvol aansoek gedoen om as spioen vir die
Britse Militere Regering op te tree.
Hy het op 22 Januarie 1905 gesterf en is in die Braamfonteinse
begraafplaas begrawe. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Johann Theophilus Hahn, son of the Rhenish missionary J. Samuel
Hahn, was born at the mission station Ebenaeser (Lutzville) on 24
December 1842. As a boy at the mission stations Ebenaeser and
Berseba and Bethanien in South West Africa (Namibia) he learned to
speak the different Khoisan dialects. Samuel Hahn left for Germany
in 1852, for the sake of his children~s academic training. There
Theophilus proved himself as an outstanding student and he obtained
his doctorate in 1870 on the dissertation Die Sprache der Nama;
nebst einem Anhang enthaltend Sprachproben aus dem Munde des
Volkes. While studying at the University of Halle he published a
number of ethnological studies relating to the aborigines of South
West Africa (Namibia).
On his return to South Africa, he became a trader in South West
Africa. After his marriage in 1875 to Marianne Esther de La Roche
Smuts he settled at Rehoboth, where he started a trading business.
Hahn left South West Africa in 1878, after it became clear that the
Cape Government's enthusiasm for action north of the Orange River
waned, as a result of its own military burdens on the eastern
border, in Griqualand West and Basutoland. He went to live with his
brother Johannes, a Rhenish missionary at Stellenbosch, where he
completed the first map of South West Africa - Original map of
Namagualand and Damaraland.
In 1881 he was appointed as government philologist and custodian of
the Grey Collection in the South African Public Library. His
appointment as Grey custodian gave rise to an application to the
Supreme Court to have the care and custody of the Grey Collection
given up to the Grey Trustees and for an interdict to restrain Hahn
from interfering with the Grey Collection. This application by the
Grey Trustees was refused by the Supreme Court.
In 1883 he provided the Cape Native Laws and Customs Commission
information regarding the Nama and Herero cultures. This commission
was directed by the Cape Government to enquire into the laws and
customs of the Blacks and to report on the advisability of
introducing some system of local self-government in the Black
territories.
While living at his farm Prospect Hill, he wrote a letter to the
agent of Adolf Llideritz,Heinrich Vogelsang, in which he supplied
valuable information about the prospects of South West Africa and
suggested that Llideritzacquire Angra Pequena (LlideritzBay) as a
harbour for trading purposes.
He resigned as philologist and Grey Librarian in 1883 and became
the manager of the farm Welmoed, in the district of Stellenbosch.
As a wine-farmer he proposed the establishing of a co-operative for
the production of wine, also prompt action for combating the
phylloxera disease.
With the assistance of Hahn the mining company Kharaskhoma
Exploring and Prospecting Syndicate, a company based in London,
obtained in 1890 important concessions from the chiefs of
Bondelswart and Veldskoendraers - a monopoly for the exploitation
of minerals, rights to trade and to contruct railways.
After the syndicate transfered its rights to the South African
Territories Company, he left South West Africa and bought th farm
Blaauwklip (Blaauwklippen) at Stellenbosch. His farming attempts
proved a disaster and his farm was sold to Cecil John Rhodes.
He became an agent for the Equitable Life Assurance Society in
Johannesburg and while residing at 206 Market Street he offered to
act as a spy for the British Military Government. This was
declined.
He died on 22 January 1905 and was buried in the Braamfontein
cemetery.
|
299 |
Head, heart, and hand : the Huguenot Seminary and College and the construction of middle class Afrikaner femininity, 1873-1910Duff, Sarah Emily 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (History))--University of Stellenbosch, 2006. / This thesis investigates the production of different forms of Afrikaner ‘femininity’ at the Huguenot Seminary and College in Wellington, between 1873 and 1910. Founded by Andrew Murray, the moderator of the Dutch Reformed Church (DRC), specifically to train Dutch-Afrikaner girls as teachers and missionaries, the school was based on a model of women’s education developed at the Mount Holyoke Seminary in Connecticut and the majority of the teachers who worked at Huguenot until the 1920s were thus American-born and trained. The Huguenot Seminary proved to be an enormous success: it was constantly in need of extra room to house its overflow of pupils, the girls came near the top of the Colony’s teaching examinations from 1875 onwards, and its associated College – founded in 1898 – was one of the first institutions in South Africa where young women could study for university degrees. It had a profound impact on the lives of a considerable proportion of white, bourgeois Dutch-Afrikaner – and English-speaking – women during this period of rapid and wide-ranging transformation in South African society and politics.
This thesis evaluates the extent to and manner in which Huguenot created particular Afrikaner ‘femininities’. The discussion begins with an exploration of the relationship between the Seminary, the Mount Holyoke system of girls’ education, and the DRC’s evangelicalism during the religious ‘revivals’ sweeping the Cape Colony in 1874-1875 and 1884-1885, paying particular attention to the teachers’ attempts to foster a quasi-religious community at the Seminary, and to the pupils’ responses to the school’s intense religiosity. It moves on to a discussion of the discourses surrounding the ideal of the educated woman that arose in the Seminary and College’s annuals between 1895 and 1910, identifying three key forms of ‘femininity’ promoted in magazines’ articles, short stories, and poetry. Finally, the thesis examines the impact of the growth of an Afrikaner ethnicity (specifically in the form of the First Afrikaans Language Movement), the South African War (1899-1902), and Alfred Milner’s South Africanism, on the ‘femininity’ espoused by the Seminary and College between 1874 and 1910.
|
300 |
An Anglican parish in transformation : the history of St. Margaret’s, Parow, 1942 - 1995Davids, Tessa Dawn 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch Univeristy, 2013. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study is an historical analysis of the History of St. Margaret’s Anglican Parish,
situated in the Northern Suburbs of Cape Town. While documenting the history of the
parish since its establishment in 1942, it also critically examines its response to the
socio-political changes the country was going through such as the Group Areas Act
and in so doing, determines the extent of its own transformation.
St. Margaret’s was not the first Anglican parish in Parow. An Anglican presence
existed in Parow since 1900 with St. John the Baptist being the first parish along with
an Anglican primary school, namely Glen Lily. The Anglican parishes of Parow were
profoundly affected by apartheid, especially the Group Areas Act which completely
changed the landscape of the town and the roles of the parishes. It led to the deconsecration
of St. John’s and the closure of Glen Lily Primary school. The church
building survived, but the school was completely demolished.
St. Margaret’s did became an independent parish, but faced many challenges as it
struggled to cope with the call from the Anglican Church to become agents of
reconciliation while Archbishop Tutu called for sanctions against South Africa and
seemingly supported the armed struggle. Despite the unhappiness with the
Archbishop’s call for greater commitment to the abolition of apartheid, the
congregation did in time find its own metier. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studiestuk bied ‘n historiese analise van die Geskiedenis van die St. Margarets
Anglikaanse Gemeente wat in die noordelike voorstede van Kaapstad geleë is. Terwyl
die geskiedenis van dié gemeente sedert sy ontstaan in 1942 gedek word, word daar
ook krities gekyk na die reaksie op die sosio-politiese veranderinge wat die land
ondergaan het, soos die Groepsgebiedewet, waardeur ook die omvang van die
gemeente se eie transformasieproses bepaal is.
St Margarets was nie die eerste Anglikaanse-gemeente in Parow nie. Reeds sedert
1900 het St John the Baptist as eerste gemeente bestaan, tesame met ‘n Anglikaanse
primêre skool, Glen Lily. Die Anglikaanse-gemeentes van Parow is deeglik geraak
deur apartheid, veral die Groepsgebiedewet wat die voorkoms van die dorp en die rol
van dié gemeentes totaal verander het. Dit het tot die sekularisering van St Johns en
die sluiting van die Laerskool Glen Lily gelei. Die kerkgebou het behoue gebly, maar
die skool is heeltemal gesloop.
St Margarets het ‘n onafhanklike gemeente geword, maar het nog verskeie uitdagings
in die gesig gestaar in sy stryd om te voldoen aan die oproep van die Anglikaanse
Kerk om agente te word vir rekonsiliasie, terwyl Aartsbiskop Tutu gevra het vir
sanksies teen Suid-Afrika en oënskynlik die gewapende stryd ondersteun het. Ten
spyte van die ongelukkigheid wat die Aartsbiskop se oproep om groter toegewydheid
aan die afskaffing van apartheid veroorsaak het, het die gemeente mettertyd haar eie
métier gevind.
|
Page generated in 0.0871 seconds