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The development, character and effects of education in a technocratic ageMathibe, Isaac Ramoloko 11 1900 (has links)
Rapid industrialization, breakthroughs in science and technological development have ushered
in an era regarded as a technocratic age. The advent of a technocratic age has necessitated the
acquisition of technologically appropriate knowledge, skills and attitudes, and consequently it
has become necessary to establish education systems that fulfil the demands set by technocratic
age principles.
Present-day education is typified by technocratic age imperatives which include meritocracy,
specialization, vocationalism, professionalism and scientism. Technocratic age education is
further characterized by mass education, free and compulsory education and greater bureaucratic
control of education. In technocratic age education systems, entrance examinations are used to
select learners for advanced education and training. It would appear that this takes place with
little regard for the learner's personal worth or meeting the learner's distinctive needs. / Educational Studies / M. Ed. (History of Education)
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A history of the National Union of South African Students (NUSAS), 1956-1970McKay, Clare Elizabeth Anne 08 1900 (has links)
The aim of the National Union of South African Students (NUSAS) was to represent the interests of all South African students nationally and internationally. The challenge then to the liberal NUSAS leadership was how to meet the demands of black students for a politically relevant policy while simultaneously retaining the loyalty of its white middle class and often conservative membership. In 1957, the black University College of Fort Hare returned to NUSAS to participate in the national union’s campaign against the imposition of apartheid on the universities. Consequently, NUSAS adopted the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights as the foundation of its policy. Sharpeville and the increasing number of black students associated with NUSAS contributed to the further politicisation and leftward movement of the national union.
The emergence of two new exclusively African student organisations together with the decision of a student seminar in Dar es Salaam that NUSAS be barred from all international student forums as its demographics precluded it from representing the aspirations of the black majority was the pretext for a far-reaching interrogation of NUSAS’s structure and functioning. Henceforward NUSAS would play a ‘radical role’ in society. This played into the hands of the government and its proxies, the new conservative students associations which sought to slice away NUSAS’s moderate to conservative white membership. The arrest of current and former NUSAS officers implicated in sabotage provided more grist to the right wing mill. In an attempt to manage this most serious crisis, as well as to continue functioning in the increasingly authoritarian and almost wholly segregated milieu of the mid-1960s, NUSAS abandoned its ‘radical role’ and increasingly focussed on university and educational matters.
Nonetheless, the state intensified its campaign to weaken NUSAS. By means of legislation, the utilisation of conservative student structures and the intimidation of university authorities, the government attempted to ensure that segregation was applied at all NUSAS-affiliated universities. It was the application of segregation by cowed university authorities that precipitated the New Left-inspired student protests at NUSAS-affiliated campuses in the late 1960s as well as the establishment of the separate black South African Students Organisation, the latter leading to the exodus of all black students from NUSAS. / History / D. Litt. et Phil. (History)
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Die verhouding tussen geskiedenis en literatuur in post-apartheid Suid-Afrika, met spesifieke verwysing na Verliesfontein deur Karel Schoeman en Op soek na Generaal Mannetjies Mentz deur Christoffel CoetzeeMoon, Jihie 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2003. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study examines the relationship between history and literature, with specific reference
to the Afrikaans novels Verliesfontein (1998) by Karel Schoeman and Op soek na generaal
Mannetjies Mentz (1998) by Christoffel Coetzee. Both novels are framed against the
background of the Anglo Boer War and both take a postmodern approach to that history,
amongst other things.
First, Chapter 2 reviews the historical background to the relationship between history and
literature through the ages (the classical era, and the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth
centuries), with a view to indicating how this tradition adheres to the postmodern spirit of
contemporary times. Thereafter, Chapter 3 presents a theoretical investigation into the
postmodern view of historiography and historical fiction. Special reference is made to
Hutcheon's theory of historiographic metafiction as an important theoretical point of
departure in the discussion of historical fiction. Political and ideological meaning implicit in
historiography is discussed. Chapter 4 explores the current trend in South Africa of
rereading and reappraising the past, of questioning traditional historiography in a postapartheid
South African context (both in Afrikaans fiction and in historical writing). The
revisiting of the Anglo Boer War in contemporary South Africa and in Afrikaans fiction is
investigated, and an attempt is made to establish the significance of its reappraisal.
Against this background the two texts, Verliesfontein and Op soek na generaal Manntjies
Mentz, are discussed in Chapter 5. The two novels amply illustrate the possibility for
interaction between history and literature, fact and fiction. How may these texts be read in
view of postmodern theory? What lessons for present-day South Africans did Schoeman and
Coetzee have in mind with their postmodern questioning of traditional historiography and
their unconventional reconstruction of the past? Reappraising conventional accounts of
history and exploring personal histories as these texts do, Verliesfontein and Op soek na
generaal Mannetjies Mentz are part of the dominant discourse that is taking form in the
multicultural society of a postapartheid South Africa today. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In hierdie studie is 'n ondersoek onderneem na die verhouding tussen geskiedenis en
literatuur, met spesifieke verwysing na Karel Schoeman se roman Verliesfontein (1998) en
Christoffel Coetzee se roman Op soek na generaal Mannetjies Mentz (1998). In hierdie twee
tekste, wat die Anglo-Boereoorlog as hul raamwerk het, is onder andere 'n
postmodernistiese benadering tot die geskiedenis benut.
Eerstens word in hoofstuk 2 oorsigtelik gekyk na die historiese agtergrond van die
verhouding tussen geskiedenis en literatuur met verloop van die tyd (die klassieke tyd,
agtiende eeu, negentiende eeu en twintigste eeu), om aan te dui hoe dié tradisie by die
heersende tydsgees van die postmodernisme aansluit. Hierna verskaf hoofstuk 3 'n
teoretiese ondersoek na die postmodernistiese manier waarop geskiedskrywing en
historiese fiksie gesien word. Die teorie van Hutcheon se historiografiese metafiksie word
veral in die bespreking van historiese fiksie betrek as 'n belangrike teoretiese uitgangspunt.
Vervolgens kom politieke en ideologiese implikasies in geskiedskrywing onder bespreking.
Daarna (hoofstuk 4) word die Suid-Afrikaanse kontemporêre tendens om die verlede te
herlees en te herwaardeer uiteengesit, en die ondermyning van die tradisionele
geskiedskrywing in die post-apartheid Suid-Afrikaanse konteks (sowel in Afrikaanse fiksie as
in geskiedskrywing) word ondersoek. Daar word gefokus op die her-bedenking van die
Anglo-Boereoorlog in die hedendaagse Suid-Afrika en in Afrikaanse fiksie, en daar word ook
probeer om die betekenis van dié herwaardering te soek.
Teen bostaande agtergrond kom die twee tekste, Verliesfontein en Op soek na generaal
Manntjies Mentz onder bespreking (hoofstuk 5). Die romans is goeie voorbeelde van die
interaksie-moontlikhede tussen geskiedenis en literatuur, feit en fiksie, en daar word
ondersoek hoe hierdie twee tekste aan die hand van postmodernistiese teorieë gelees kan
word. Uiteindelik word daar besin oor watter lesse Schoeman en Coetzee met die
postmodernistiese problematisering van geskiedskrywing en die onkonvensionele
rekonstruksie van die verlede aan kontemporêre Suid-Afrikaners wou oordra. Met die herbesinning
van die konvensionele weergawe van die geskiedenis en veral deur die
verkenning van persoonlike geskiedenisse, vorm Verliesfontein en Op soek na generaal
Mannetjies Mentz deel van die heersende diskoers wat vandag in 'n multikulturele
samelewing van die post-apartheid Suid-Afrika aan die ontwikkel is.
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Ikonoklastiese strip, polemiek en BitterkomixKannemeyer, Anton 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (Visual Arts)) -- University of Stellenbosch, 1997 / 168 leaves printed single pages,preliminary pages and numberd pages 1-70.Includes bibliography and 115 illustrations.Digitized at 600 dpi grayscale to pdf format (OCR),using an Bizhub 250 Konica Minolta Scanner. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study considers the history and problematics of the contemporary comic strip,
particularly in regard to issues of controversy and iconoclasm. Special attention is paid
to the local magazine, Bitterkomix as an example.
In Chapter One, the comic medium is identified and discussed as a homogeneous art
form. Its independence from both fine arts and literature is explained and the identifying,
intrinsic characteristics of the medium are used as a basis for the analysis of form and
meaning in selected contemporary comics.
Chapter Two provides a brief history of iconoclasm, subversion and controversy
surrounding selected comics from the 1950's up to the present. The emphasis is placed
on pivotal developments in the medium, particularly in the United States. A link is
suggested between the post-war affluence of the American society and the conservative
values which underpin it.
Because of the many similarities which exist between the value systems of white South
Africa and those of the more conservative states of the U.S., a contextual parallel is
mooted which identifies the development and impact of controversial comics abroad and
the reception which Bitterkomix encountered in South Africa. Chapter Three outlines and
analyses this connection, emphasising that Bitterkomix has to be seen in the wider
historical context and not simply as an expression of a parochial, "alternative"culture
among young Afrikaners.
In the final two chapters, satire and the use of stereotypes in the comic form is
considered. The study pays particular attention to the publications, Gif, Afrikaner
Sekskomix and Loslyf(an Afrikaans skin magazine) in order to establish connections
between deviant sexual behaviour in a repressive society. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING:In hierdie werkstuk word die geskiedenis en problematiek van die hedendaagse strip,
veral die kontroversieIe en ikonoklastiese aspekte daarvan, aangespreek. As 'n
voorbeeld word die aandag veral toegespits op die plaaslike tydskrif, Bitterkomix.
In Hoofstuk Een word die stripmedium geidentifiseer en as homogene kunsvorm
bespreek. Die medium se onafhanklikheid van beide die Skone Kunste en die
Letterkunde word verduidelik en die identifiserende, intrinsieke kenmerke word basies
toegepas vir die ontleding van vorm en betekenis in gekose, hedendaagse strips.
Hoofstuk Twee bestaan uit 'n kort oorsig van die geskiedenis van ikonoklasme,
ondermyning en kontroverse rondom geselekteerde strips vanaf 1950 tot die hede. Die
k1em word geplaas op deurslaggewende ontwikkelings in die medium, veral in die
Verenigde State. 'n Skakel word voorgestel tussen die na-oorlogse welvaart van die
Amerikaanse gemeenskap en die konserwatiewe waardes onderliggend daaraan.
As gevolg van die baie ooreenkomste tussen die waarde-sisteme van wit Suid-Afrika
en die van die meer konserwatiewe state van die V.S., word 'n kontekstuele parallel
vasgestel wat die ontwikkeling en impak van kontroversieIe strips in die buiteland en
die reaksie op Bitterkomix in Suid-Afrika, identifiseer. Hoofstuk Drie skets en ontleed
hierdie verbintenis en beklemtoon dat Bitterkomix in 'n wyer historiese konteks beskou
moet word en nie slegs as 'n uitdrukking van 'n parogiale, "altematiewe" kuItuur
onder jong Afrikaners nie.
In die laaste twee hoofstukke word satire en die gebruik van stereotipes in die
stripvorm oorweeg. Aandag word veral gegee aan die publikasies Gif: Afrikoner
Sekskomix, en Loslyf( 'n Afrikaanse sekstydskrif) om kwessies van abnormale
seksuele gedrag in 'n repressiewe gemeenskap aan te raak.
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Diasporic imaginaries : memory and negotiation of belonging in East African and South African Indian narrativesOcita, James 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2013. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This dissertation explores selected Indian narratives that emerge in South Africa and East Africa between 1960 and 2010, focusing on representations of migrations from the late 19th century, with the entrenchment of mercantile capitalism, to the early 21st century entry of immigrants into the metropolises of Europe, the US and Canada as part of the post-1960s upsurge in global migrations. The (post-)colonial and imperial sites that these narratives straddle re-echo Vijay Mishra‘s reading of Indian diasporic narratives as two autonomous archives designated by the terms, "old" and "new" diasporas. The study underscores the role of memory both in quests for legitimation and in making sense of Indian marginality in diasporic sites across the continent and in the global north, drawing together South Asia, Africa and the global north as continuous fields of analysis.
Categorising the narratives from the two locations in their order of emergence, I explore how Ansuyah R. Singh‘s Behold the Earth Mourns (1960) and Bahadur Tejani‘s Day After Tomorrow (1971), as the first novels in English to be published by a South African and an East African writer of Indian descent, respectively, grapple with questions of citizenship and legitimation. I categorise subsequent narratives from South Africa into those that emerge during apartheid, namely, Ahmed Essop‘s The Hajji and Other Stories (1978), Agnes Sam‘s Jesus is Indian and Other Stories (1989) and K. Goonam‘s Coolie Doctor: An Autobiography by Dr Goonam (1991); and in the post-apartheid period, including here Imraan Coovadia‘s The Wedding (2001) and Aziz Hassim‘s The Lotus People (2002) and Ronnie Govender‘s Song of the Atman (2006). I explore how narratives under the former category represent tensions between apartheid state – that aimed to reveal and entrench internal divisions within its borders as part of its technology of rule – and the resultant anti-apartheid nationalism that coheres around a unifying ―black‖ identity, drawing attention to how the texts complicate both apartheid and anti-apartheid strategies by simultaneously suggesting and bridging differences or divisions. Post-apartheid narratives, in contrast to the homogenisation of "blackness", celebrate ethnic self-assertion, foregrounding cultural authentication in response to the post-apartheid "rainbow-nation" project.
Similarly, I explore subsequent East African narratives under two categories. In the first category I include Peter Nazareth‘s In a Brown Mantle (1972) and M.G. Vassanji‘s The Gunny Sack (1989) as two novels that imagine Asians‘ colonial experience and their entry into the post-independence dispensation, focusing on how this transition complicates notions of home and national belonging. In the second category, I explore Jameela Siddiqi‘s The Feast of the Nine Virgins (1995), Yasmin Alibhai-Brown‘s No Place Like Home (1996) and Shailja Patel‘s Migritude (2010) as post-1990 narratives that grapple with political backlashes that engender migrations and relocations of Asian subjects from East Africa to imperial metropolises. As part of the recognition of the totalising and oppressive capacities of culture, the three authors, writing from both within and without Indianness, invite the diaspora to take stock of its role in the fermentation of political backlashes against its presence in East Africa. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie fokus op geselekteerde narratiewe deur skrywers van Indiër-oorsprong wat tussen 1960 en 2010 in Suid-Afrika en Oos-Afrika ontstaan om uitbeeldings van migrerings en verskuiwings vanaf die einde van die 19e eeu, ná die vestiging van handelskapitalisme, immigrasie in die vroeë 21e eeu na die groot stede van Europa, die VS en Kanada, te ondersoek, met die oog op navorsing na die toename in globale migrasies. Die (post-)koloniale en imperial liggings wat in hierdie narratiewe oorvleuel, beam Vijay Mishra se lesing van diasporiese Indiese narratiewe as twee outonome argiewe wat deur die terme "ou" en "nuwe" diasporas aangedui word. Hierdie proefskrif bestudeer die manier waarop herinneringe benut word, nie alleen in die soeke na legitimisering en burgerskap nie, maar ook om tot 'n beter begrip te kom van die omstandighede wat Asiërs na die imperiale wêreldstede loods.
Ek kategoriseer die twee narratiewe volgens die twee lokale en in die volgorde waarin hulle verskyn het en bestudeer Ansuyah R Singh se Behold the Earth Mourns (1960) en Bahadur Tejani se Day After Tomorrow (1971) as die eerste roman wat deur 'n Suid-Afrikaanse en 'n Oos-Afrikaanse skrywe van Indiese herkoms in Engels gepubliseer is, en die wyse waarop hulle onderskeidelik die kwessies van burgerskap en legitimisasie benader. In daaropvolgende verhale van Suid-Afrika, onderskei ek tussen narratiewe at hul onstaan in die apartheidsjare gehad het, naamlik The Hajji and Other Stories deur Ahmed Essop, Jesus is Indian and Other Stories (1989) deur Agnes Sam en Coolie Doctor: An Autobiography by Dr. Goonam deur K. Goonam; uit die post-apartheid era kom The Wedding (2001) deur Imraan Covadia en The Lotus People (2002) deur Aziz Hassim, asook Song of the Atman (2006) deur Ronnie Govender. Ek kyk hoe die verhale in die eerste kategorie spanning beskryf tussen die apartheidstaat — en die gevolglike anti-apartheidnasionalisme in 'n eenheidskeppende "swart" identiteit — om die aandag te vestig op die wyse waarop die tekste sowel apartheid- as anti-apartheid strategieë kompliseer deur tegelykertyd versoeningsmoontlikhede en verdeelheid uit te beeld. Post-apartheid verhale, daarenteen, loof eerder etniese selfbemagtiging met die klem op kulturele outentisiteit in reaksie op die post-apartheid bevordering van 'n "reënboognasie", as om 'n homogene "swartheid" voor te staan.
Op dieselfde manier bestudeer ek die daaropvolgende Oos-Afrikaanse verhale onder twee kategorieë. In die eerste kategorie sluit ek In an Brown Mantle (1972) deur Peter Nazareth en The Gunny Sack (1989) deur M.G. Vassanjiin, as twee romans wat Asiërs se koloniale geskiedenis en hul toetrede tot die post-onafhanklikheid bedeling uitbeeld (verbeeld) (imagine), met die klem op die wyse waarop hierdie oorgang begrippe van samehorigheid kompliseer. In die tweede kategorie kyk ek na The Feast of the Nine Virgins (1995) deur Jameela Siddiqi, No Place Like Home (1996) deur Yasmin Alibhai en Migritude (2010) deur Shaila Patel as voorbeelde van post-1990 verhale wat probleme met die politieke teenreaksies en verskuiwings van Asiër-onderdane vanuit Oos-Afrika na wêreldstede aanspreek. As deel van die erkenning van die totaliserende en onderdrukkende kapasiteit van kultuur, vra die drie skrywers – as Indiërs en as wêreldburgers – die diaspora om sy rol in die opstook van politieke teenreaksie teen sy teenwoordigheid in Oos-Afrika onder oënskou te neem.
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Manufacturing cultural capital : arts journalism at Die Burger (1990-1999)Botma, Gabriel Johannes 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2011. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study examines the discursive role and positioning of arts journalism at Die Burger
during a period of radical transformation in South African society. The study is conducted
within a critical-cultural paradigm. Arts journalists are considered to be manufacturers of
cultural capital, a term devised by Pierre Bourdieu as part of his comprehensive field theory
framework. While Bourdieu uses cultural capital in the main to describe the role of education
and culture in the maintenance of elite power hierarchies, this study investigates how the
nature of cultural capital at Die Burger was affected by power shifts when competing elites
jostled for dominance in a post-apartheid dispensation.
By drawing on Michel Foucault’s theory of discourse, the focus of research further
incorporates the discursive positioning of arts journalists in their coverage of arts and cultural
events in the 1990s in relation to shifting configurations of power. The argument is that arts
journalism at Die Burger can be situated within networks of power and thus contributed to the
structuring of post-apartheid society. In the words of Antonio Gramsci, arts journalists
became involved in hegemonic and counter-hegemonic struggles.
Flowing from these theoretical departure points, the study identifies critical discourse analysis
(CDA) as an appropriate research method for textual analysis and adapts a five-phase model
suggested by Teun van Dijk as part of his contextual CDA approach. The analysis thus
focuses in turn on the context of discourse, discursive struggles between arts journalists and
political journalists, strategies of classification used by arts journalists, emerging themes of
discourse in arts journalism, and how the selection and presentation of arts journalism on
news and arts pages were influenced by various factors, including the personal background
and experiences of arts journalists (The concept of Bourdieu’s “habitus”). To affect
triangulation and enhance the textual analysis, the study also employs semi-structured indepth
interviews with arts journalists who were prominent at Die Burger in the 1990s.
The study found that arts journalists were at the intersection of different and often diverging
and contradictory power-points in post-apartheid discourses at the newspaper. On the one
hand, some arts journalists embraced a legacy of editorial independence at the arts desk and
sometimes created oppositional discourses to the official political view of the newspaper: for
instance on the issue of alleged “collective guilt” for Afrikaners and whether Naspers should appear before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) to explain its role in
supporting the National Party (NP) during apartheid. On the other hand, many arts journalists
shared the editor’s apparent aversion to the international cultural boycott supported by the
ANC and harboured some of the same skepticism about the so-called Africanisation of society
and resultant attacks on Eurocentrism in the arts.
This study -- the first on this level to focus on Afrikaans arts journalism since 1994 --
represents a significant contribution to knowledge in the under-researched field of arts
journalism in South Africa. Its purpose and process has furthermore developed theoretical and
methodological innovations which can enrich the field of journalism studies. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die studie -- vanuit 'n kritiese kulturele paradigma -- ondersoek die diskursiewe posisionering
en rol van kunsjoernalistiek by Die Burger gedurende 'n periode van radikale transformasie in
die Suid-Afrikaanse samelewing. Kunsjoernaliste word beskryf as vervaardigers van kulturele
kapitaal, soos gekonsepsualiseer deur Pierre Bourdieu in sy omvattende raamwerk van veldteorie.
Terwyl Bourdieu die term kulturele kapitaal hoofsaaklik gebruik om die rol van
opvoeding en kultuur in die behoud van hierargieë van elite-mag te beskryf, ondersoek hierdie
studie hoe die aard van kulturele kapitaal by Die Burger beïnvloed is deur magsverskuiwings
waarin mededingende post-apartheid elite-groepe mekaar die stryd aangesê het.
Deur gebruik te maak van Michel Foucault se teorie van diskoers, val die fokus van navorsing
dus op die diskursiewe posisionering van kunsjoernaliste in hul dekking van kuns-en-kultuurgebeure
in the 1990’s. Die argument is dat kunsjoernalistiek by Die Burger binne
magsnetwerke geplaas kan word en bygedra het tot die strukturering van die post-apartheid
samelewing. In Antonio Gramsci se terme het kunsjoernaliste dus betrokke geraak in die stryd
om hegemonie te skep en teen te werk.
Uitvloeiend uit hierdie teoretiese vertrekpunte word kritiese diskoersanalise (KDA) as
navorsingsmetode vir die ontleding van joernalistieke tekste geïdentifiseer. Daarvolgens word 'n model met vyf stappe, voorgestel deur Teun van Dijk as deel van sy KDA-benadering,
aangepas vir gebruik. Die analise fokus dus om die beurt op die konteks van diskoers, die
diskursiewe stryd tussen kunsjoernaliste en politieke joernaliste, strategieë van klassifikasie
wat kunsjoernaliste gebruik het, temas van diskoers wat aan die lig gekom het in
kunsjoernalistiek, en hoe die seleksie en aanbieding van kuns-en-kultuur-nuus deur
verskillende faktore beïnvloed is, insluitend deur die persoonlike agtergrond en ondervinding
van kunsjoernaliste (“habitus” in Bourdieu se teorie). Om triangulasie te bewerkstelling en die
teks-analise te ondersteun, is semi-gestruktureerde in-diepte onderhoude met prominente
kunsjoernaliste aangelê.
Die studie het vasgestel dat kunsjoernaliste in post-apartheid diskoerse in die koerant hulself
op 'n kruispunt van verskillende, soms uiteenlopende en selfs opponerende strominge van mag
bevind het. Aan die een kant het sommige kunsjoernaliste 'n tradisie van redaksionele
onafhanklikheid omarm en soms opposisionele politieke diskoerse in vergelyking met die amptelike beleid van die koerant geskep, byvoorbeeld oor die kwessie van beweerde
“kollektiewe skuld” vir Afrikaners en of Naspers voor die Waarheid-en-
Versoeniningskommissie (WVK) moes verskyn om sy rol as ondersteuner van die Nasionale
Party (NP) gedurende apartheid te verduidelik. Maar aan die ander kant het talle
kunsjoernaliste die redakteur se klaarblyklike afkeer gedeel aan die internasionale kultuurboikot
wat deur die ANC ondersteun is. Kunsjoernaliste was ook skepties oor die sogenaamde
Afrikanisering van die samelewing en gevolglike aanvalle op Eurosentriese kuns.
Ten slotte maak hierdie studie -- die eerste op hierdie vlak oor Afrikaanse kunsjoernalistiek
sedert 1994 -- 'n belangrike bydrae tot die yl kennisveld van kunsjoernalistiek in Suid-Afrika.
In die proses het die studie ook teoretiese en metodologiese innovasies aangebring wat die
veld van joernalistiek-studies kan verryk.
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Challenges for journalism education and training in a transforming society : a case study of three selected institutions in post-1994 South AfricaDube, Bevelyn 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2013. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study investigated the challenges for journalism education and training (JE&T) in a
post-1994 transforming South Africa. Prior to 1994, South Africa had three distinct university
systems with different ideological orientations, namely historically Afrikaans-language
universities, historically English-language universities, and historically “black” universities.
The consequence of these orientations in the university system caused a paradigmatic schism
in the field of JE&T. The advent of democracy in 1994 necessitated the questioning of this
division in higher education. One could assume that there was need to transform the JE&T
curricula so that it could address the challenges of a society in transformation. This study,
therefore, aimed to establish whether JE&T curricula in three selected tertiary institutions in
post-1994 South Africa have transformed in line with the transformation process in the
country. The post-colonial theory, developmental journalism model and Ubuntu philosophy
were deemed the most appropriate theoretical points of departure from which to analyse the
curricula. A collective case study was used as a research design. To collect data, a mixedmethod approach, which utilised both qualitative and quantitative approaches, was used.
Qualitative data were collected through use of programme documents from the selected
journalism tertiary institutions and a semi-structured questionnaire, which was distributed to
programme coordinators. Quantitative data were obtained through the structured
questionnaire which was completed by students in the selected programmes. The qualitative
data obtained were analysed using qualitative content analysis, while quantitative data were
analysed using the statistical package SPSS version 18. The data were then analysed and
discussed in terms of the selected theories. The analysis revealed that the three programmes
are highly dependent on Western epistemologies. The programmes have a close relationship
with the media industry, a relationship which at times can be a double-edged sword. The
findings also show that the programme coordinators of these programmes are not averse to
the transformation of curricula provided the process takes into cognisance Western
epistemologies. The results also showed that in terms of gender and race, transformation has
either been insignificant or non-existent. Lastly, all three programmes do not teach their
students to report in indigenous languages. The final conclusion of the study is that JE&T in
the selected programmes are not yet addressing the challenges of a transforming post-1994
South Africa. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie het die uitdagings aan joernalistieke opvoeding en opleiding (JO&O) in ’n
post-1994, transformerende Suid-Afrika ondersoek. Voor 1994 het Suid-Afrika drie
verskillende universiteitstelsels met verskillende ideologiese oriëntasies gehad, naamlik
historiese Afrikaanse universiteite, historiese Engelse universiteite en historiese “swart”
universiteite. Die gevolg van hierdie oriëntasies in die universiteitstelsel het ’n
paradigmatiese skisma in die veld van JO&O veroorsaak. Die koms van demokrasie in 1994
het die bevraagtekening van hierdie skeiding in hoër onderwys genoodsaak. Die aanname kon
gemaak word dat daar ’n behoefte was om JO&O kurrikula te transformeer sodat dit aan die
uitdagings van ’n samelewing in oorgang kon beantwoord. Hierdie studie het dus beoog om
vas te stel of JO&O kurrikula in drie geselekteerde tersiêre inrigtings in ’n post-1994 SuidAfrika saam met die landgetransformeer het. Die postkoloniale teorie, ontwikkelingsjoernalistiek-teorie en Ubuntu-filosofie is geoordeel om die mees toepaslike teoretiese
vertrekpunte te wees om die kurrikula mee te evalueer. ’n Kollektiewe gevallestudie is as
navorsingsontwerp gebruik. As dataversamelingsmetodologie is ’n gemengde metodesbenadering gevolg, waarin kwalitatiewe en kwantitatiewe metodologieë gebruik is.
Kwalitatiewe data is deur’n analise van die programdokumente van die geselekteerde tersiêre
instellings versamel, asook deur ’n semi-gestruktureerde vraelys aan die
programkoördineerders. Kwantitatiewe data is verkry danksy ’n gestruktureerde vraelys wat
deur studente in die onderskeie programme voltooi is. Die kwalitatiewe data is geanaliseer
deur kwalitatiewe inhoudsanalise, terwyl die kwantitatiewe data geanaliseer is deur die
statistiese pakket SPSS weergawe18. Die data is daarna aan die geselekteerde teorieëgetoets
en daarvolgens geëvalueer. Die analise het getoon dat die drie programme sterk steun op
Westerse epistemologieë. Die drie programme het stewige verhoudings met die mediabedryf,
’n verhouding wat soms ’n tweesnydende swaard kan wees. Die bevindinge toon ook dat die
koördineerders van die programme nie onwillig oor die transformasie van kurrikula is nie,
met dien verstande die proses neem Westerse epistemologieë in aanmerking. Die resultate het
ook aangetoon dat transformasie onbeduidend of nie-bestaande was in terme van geslag en
ras. Die drie programme bied ook geen onderrig in inheemse Afrika-tale aan nie. Die finale
slotsom van die studie was dat JO&O in die geselekteerde programme nog nie die uitdagings
van ’n transformerende post-1994 Suid-Afrika aanspreek nie. / University of Venda
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Gemeenskapsgebaseerde teater : 'n Suid-Afrikaans georienteerde ondersoekBrand, Amelda 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MDram)--University of Stellenbosch, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Creative expression is influenced by social structures and the political climate of the day.
Therefore theatre as a social structure has been directly influenced by colonialism and
apartheid. Restricting legislation had a limiting influence on cultural activities and
freedom of creative expression.
The following terms all refer to community based theatre activities: Community Theatre,
Popular Theatre, Theatre for Development, People's Theatre and sometimes Workshop
Theatre.
Community theatre in post-colonial African countries take place in locations easily
accessible to the communities it serves. These activities make use of creative techniques
that the target communities can identify with. The subject-matter is generally relevant
and is therefore accessible. The conscientisation- and mobilisation-potential of
community theatre become evident in post-colonial African countries. The uses of this
term in South Africa is closely connected with the above, but the applications in practice
are more diverse because of a longer period of Western influence.
Popular Theatre encapsulates theatre activities focussing on mass-appeal and popular
entertainment as well as theatre activities by and for marginalised communities. "Popular
Theatre" activities that take place within marginalised communities make use of
collective creative approaches that are aimed at community conscientisation and
mobilisation.
Like Community Theate and Popular Theatre, Theatre for Development is theatre for, by
and of the people (marginalised people, ordinary workers and the unemployed). Certain
Theatre for Development projects approach the target communities with pre-planned
agendas and creative subject-matter. Theatre for Development, like other community
based theatre forms, are aimed at conscientisation, mobilisation and organisation to
encourage political liberation and promote a higher standard ofliving. Workshop Theatre encourages people to express themselves by using a democratic and
collective creative approach. These characteristics are also present in the previously
mentioned theatre forms.
Community Theatre, Popular Theatre and Theatre for Development can all be categorised
as community based theatre and the terms are interchangable in pracitce. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Politieke omstandighede en daaglikse gebeure beïnvloed die keuse van
uitdrukkingsvorme. Kolonialisme en veral die apartheidsbeleid in Suid-Afrika het sosiale
strukture, waaronder teater, beïnvloed. Wetgewing en beperkte infrastruktuur het
kulturele aktiwiteite, kreatiewe uitdrukking en kulturele vloei beperk.
Gemeenskapsgebaseerde teateraktiwiteite in Suid-Afrika word meestal benoem met die
volgende terme: Gemeenskapsteater, Populêre Teater, Teater vir Ontwikkeling, "People's
Theatre", asook Werkswinkelteater wat in Suid-Afrika soms sosio-polities van aard is.
Gemeenskapsteater in post-koloniale Afrika-lande is ten opsigte van vorm en inhoud vir
die teikengemeenskap toeganklik en vind plaas in maklik bereikbare ruimtes. Die
bewusmakings- en mobiliseringspotensiaal van Gemeenskapsteater kom sterk na vore in
post-koloniale Afrika-lande. Die gebruike van die term "Gemeenskapsteater" in Suid-
Afrika sluit by bogenoemde aan, maar het ook meer diverse toepassings wat by
ontwikkelde lande se beskouings aansluit.
Populêre Teater ondervang teateraktiwiteite wat fokus op massa-aanhang, sowel as
teateraktiwiteite wat gemik is op gemarginaliseerdes. In laasgenoemde konteks is dit
gerig op bemagtiging en word 'n kollektiewe skeppingsproses gebruik.
Teater vir Ontwikkeling is soos Gemeenskapsteater en Populêre Teater, teater vir, deur en
van "die mense" (gemarginaliseerdes, massa gewone werkers en werkloses). Anders as
Gemeenskapsteater kan daar 'n voorafopgestelde agenda of gekose onderwerp wees.
Soos ander gemeenskapsgebaseerde teater strewe dit na bewusmaking, mobilisasie en
organisasie ter wille van bevryding en verhoogde lewensstandaarde in gemarginaliseerde
gemeenskappe. Werkswinkelteater het 'n demokratiese en kollektiewe skeppingsproses wat selfvertroue
en die vermoë tot uitdrukking aanmoedig. Dit is 'n eienskap wat ook teenwoordig is in
die voorafgenoemde teatervorme.
Teateraktiwiteite wat met die terme Gemeenskapsteater, Populêre Teater en Teater vir
Ontwikkeling benoem word, kan gekatagoriseer word as gemeenskapsgebaseerde teater
en is dikwels in die praktyk omruilbaar.
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Strategies of representation in South African anti-apartheid documentary film and video from 1976 to 1995Maingard, Jacqueline Marie 20 May 2014 (has links)
This thesis focuses on strategies of representation in South African anti-apartheid
documentary film and video from the late 1970s to 1995. It identifies and analyses
two broad trends within this movement: the first developed by the organisation called
Video News Services; the second developed in the Mail and Guardian Television
series called Ordinary People. Two history series are analysed against the backdrop
of transformations in the television broadcasting sector in the early 1990s. South
African documentary film and video is located within a theoretical framework that
interweaves documentary film theory, theories of Third cinema and of identity, rid
working class cinema of the 1920s and 1930s.
The concepts of ‘voice’ and the ‘speaking subject’ are the two key concepts that focus
the discussion of strategies of representation in detailed textual analyses of selected
documentaries. The analysis of three documentaries that typify the output of Video
News Services reveals how these documentary texts establish a symbiosis between
representations of the working class as black, male, and allied to COSATU, and the
liberation struggle. The analysis of selected documentaries from the Ordinary People
series highlights those strategies of representation that facilitate perceptions of the
multiplicities of identities in South Africa. This focus on representations of identity is
extended in analysing and comparing two television series. The strategies of
representation evident in the Video News Services documentaries and the meanings
they produce about identify are repeated in the series called Ulibambe Lingashoni:
Hold Up the Sun. In Soweto: A History, strategies of representation that follow the
trend towards representing identity as multiple are used to present history as if from
the perspective of ‘ordinary’ people.
The thesis creates an argument for South African documentary film and video to
move towards strategies of representation that break down the fixed categories of
identity developed under apartheid. With policy moves for creating more ‘local
content’ films and television productions there is opportunity to re-shape the
documentary film and video movement in South Africa using representational
strategies that blur the boundaries between documentary and fiction, and between
individualised, discrete categories of identity.
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Queer entanglements: postcolonial intimacies, spaces and times in Greyson and Lewis's Proteus (2003)Katz, Jacqueline Lee January 2016 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the
Witwatersrand, in fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of
Master of Art in Dramatic Arts / My dissertation presents a textual analysis of John Greyson and Jack Lewis's
South African film, Proteus (2003), which is based on archival records and
plots the never-before-told narrative of an intimacy between two inmates on
16th century Robben Island. Locating this same-sex intimacy in the 1700s Cape
Colony has far-reaching implications when considered in relation to the
increasingly pervasive twenty-first century discourse which proposes that
homosexuality is necessarily 'unAfrican'. The film's social and political
commentary is, therefore, significant for how we might think about sexuality,
among other subjectivities, in post-apartheid South Africa.
By analysing the film's formal and thematic attributes, I demonstrate that the
directors' protean approach to filmmaking has queering effects for the linear
notion of time and the cohesive conceptualisation of identity that the colonial
archive tends to reinforce. I suggest that commonsense notions of time, space,
language and identity that structure the archive have allowed for multiple
fissures to develop along the trajectory from past to present. As I show, the
aforementioned process has almost effaced from official records narratives,
such as the one told in Proteus, that would trouble totalising ideas about the
intimate orientations of certain individuals. Therefore, I argue that while the
record of this same-sex intimacy does appear in the archive, it has been
subsumed by other, more dominant, narratives. The film's work, which I
replicate in my reading of it, has been to queer this archive by foregrounding
what has historically been repressed.
In my first chapter, I argue that by enacting what Halberstam (2005) terms a
mode of 'queer temporality', Proteus carves out spaces in the archive for
alternative renditions of history to come into visibility in ways that demand
fluidity and heterogeneity. I propose that the strategic filmic mechanisms
employed in Proteus necessarily engender nuanced spectatorial procedures,
which call on the spectator to engage reflexively with the film. I continue to
argue for the spectator's need to be particularly reflexive throughout the
dissertation. My second chapter deals with the filmmakers' strategic use of
language in order to present a commentary on the material effects that the
acts of 'naming' and 'categorising' have on living bodies. The final chapter
explores a critical perspective which has not previously been brought to bear
on the film. I examine how Greyson and Lewis construct positions for their
main characters from which they may assert their subjectivity - what Mirzoeff
(2011) describes as 'the right to look'.
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