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"Listen to our song listen to our demand" : South African struggle songs, poems and plays : an anthropological perspectiveMaree, Gert Hendrik 03 1900 (has links)
Proceeding from the premise that the meaning of performances flows from contextual, textual, and nonverbal elements, this dissertation explores layers of meaning arising from performances of selected South African struggle songs, poems and plays. In particular, it focuses on performances of the Mayibuye Cultural Group which functioned as an adaptive mechanism in the changing sociopolitical landscape of the 1980s and early 1990s, and on contemporary performances. The analysis of the songs, poems and play underscores the importance of nonverbal elements for the interpretation of performances, and proposes that performances functioned as debate and as a discursive presence in the public sphere. In particular, the performances glorified a masculine conception of the struggle and of South African society which highlighted the fragile gender politics in South Africa, and functioned as a vibrant mechanism for the expression of sanctioned criticism especially for the marginalised and for those at the fringes of power. / Anthropology / M.A. (Anthropology)
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South African political prison-literature between 1948 and 1990 : the prisoner as writer and political commentatorBooth-Yudelman, Gillian Carol, Yudelman, Gillian Carol Booth- 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines works written about imprisonment by
four South African political prison writers who were incarcerated
for political reasons. My Introduction focuses on current
research and literature available on the subject of political
prison-writing and it justifies the study to be undertaken.
Chapter One examines the National Party's policy pertaining to
the holding of political prisoners and discusses the work of
Michel Foucault on the subject of imprisonment as well as the
connection he makes between knowledge and power. This chapter
also considers the factors that motivate a prisoner to write.
Bearing in mind Foucault's findings, Chapters Two to Five
undertake detailed studies of La Guma's The Stone Country, Dennis
Brutus's Letters to Martha, Hugh Lewin's Bandiet and Breyten
Breytenbach's The True Confessions of an Albino Terrorist,
respectively. Particular emphasis is placed on the reaction of
these writers against a repressive government. In addition,
Chapters Two to Five reflect on the way in which imprisonment
affected them from a psychological point of view, and on the
manner in which they were, paradoxically, empowered by their
prison experience. Chapters Four and Five also consider capital
punishment and Lewin and Breytenbach's response to living in a
hanging jail. I contemplate briefly the works of Frantz Fanon in
the conclusion in order to elaborate on the reasons for the
failure of the system of apartheid and the policy of political
imprisonment and to reinforce my argument. / English Studies / D. Litt. et Phil. (English)
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A genealogical study of South African literature teaching at South African universities : towards a reconstruction of the curriculumChetty, Rajendra Patrick 11 1900 (has links)
The colonial history of South Africa and its legacy of cultural
and linguistic domination have resulted in a situation where the.
literatures of the majority of South Africans were relegated to
the margins of institutional, social and cultural life.
Exclusion (of local writings) was the principal mode by which
power was exercised within university English departments. It
is within this context that this study posits lacunae and
challenges for the reconstruction of the South African literature
curriculum.
Although various approaches have been used by English
departments during this decade to include South African
literature in the curriculum (pluralism, inter-disciplinary
studies, alternate canon formation, canon rejection, eclecticism,
elective programmes, etc.), the curriculum continues to repeat
the established norms and values of colonial/apartheid society,
it avoids confronting the ideological construction of traditional
English literature and is a revamping or upgrading of the
programmes offered during the colonial/apartheid era.
The genealogical study uncovers the production, regulation,
distribution, circulation and operation of statements, decentres
discourse, and reveals how discourse is secondary to systems of
power. Chapter Four explores both theoretical and methodological
underpinnings for the reconstruction of the South African
literature curriculum deriving from the critical educational
approaches of Freire, Giroux and Apple, the discursive approach
of Foucault and the post colonial reading strategies of
Zavarzadeh and Morton.
The teaching of South African literature would best be served by
working within a critical paradigm, having as its objective the
goals of critical educational studies. Chapter Four also
includes a review of the curriculum in local practice through a
curriculum impact study using empirical research based on the
1996 English literature syllabi of South African universities as
well as the findings of the surveys conducted by Malan and Bosman
in 1986 and Lindfors in 1992.
Chapter Five posits recommendations for curriculum reconstruction
with the main focus on the intervention of radical strategies
that would lead to a new conflictual reading list. The objective
is to put the canon under erasure by problematising the concept
of literariness. Such an approach also reveals the power/
knowledge relations of culture, ideologies that dominate the
discipline and the institutional arrangements of knowledge. / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / D.Ed. (Didactics)
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Uitbeelding van apartheid in Engelse Suid-Afrikaanse jeugliteratuurGreyling, Isa Jakoba 11 1900 (has links)
Summaries in Afrikaans and English / Apartheid het die oorgrote meerderheid Suid-Afrikaners se lewens onherroeplik beinvloed. Dit is
daarom te verstane dat dit in die Suid-Afrikaanse literatuur, insluitende die Engelse Suid-Afiikaanse
jeugliteratuur, neerslag gevind het.
Ten einde die studie in konteks te plaas, word in die eerste drie hoofstukke 'n historiese oorsig van
die apartheidsera, Engelse Suid-Afrikaanse volwasse literatuur, en Engelse Suid-Afrikaanse kinderen
jeugliteratuur, gegee. Die hoofgedeelte van die studie word vervolgens bespreek, en is in die
volgende drie hoofstukke verdeel:
• Die uitbeelding van sosio-ekonomiese toestande gedurende die apartheidsera, soos
byvoorbeeld van afsonderlike woongebiede en aparte openbare geriewe.
• Die uitbeelding van die onderwystoestande, veral van die Bantoe-onderwysbeleid.
• Die uitbeelding van die veiligheidsmagte (polisie en weermag), insluitende die beeld van
hierdie magte in die bree gemeenskap.
Ten slotte word verskillende ooreenkomste wat na vore gekom bet in die bestudeerde Engelse
Suid-Afrikaanse jeugromans waarin apartheid uitgebeeld word, bespreek. Daar word ook gekyk na
die waarde van hierdie jeugromans. / Apartheid had a irrevocably influence on the lives of the majority of people in South Africa.
Therefore it is understandable that it would be portrayed in South African literature, including the
English South African youth literature.
To put the subject in context, the first three chapters ofthe thesis deal with a historical overview of
the apartheidera; South African English adult literature; and South African English children's
literature. The main part of the thesis has been divided as follows:
• The portrayal of socio-economic conditions, e.g. separate residential areas and public
amenities.
• The portrayal of the education situation, especially the Black Education policy.
• The portrayal of the security forces (police and army), including the images of these forces
in the broader community.
To conclude the thesis, similarities in the youth novels portraying apartheid are discussed. The value
of these youth novels is also looked into. / Information Science / M. Inf.
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Changing images : representations of the Southern African black women in works by Bessie Head, Ellen Kuzwayo, Mandla Langa and Mongane SeroteMarsden, Dorothy Frances 11 1900 (has links)
This study examines representations of Southern African black women
in the works' of two male and two female writers. A comparative
approach is used to review the ways in which the writers
characterise women who labour under intense restrictions in
domestic situations, the workplace, and in political contexts.
Some representations suggest that women have come to terms with
social strictures and have learned to live fulfilled lives despite
them. Other representations are contextualised in creative situations
in which social roles are re-imagined. In the process,
women are removed from conventional object-related gendered
positions. These representations suggest that women have the
capability to achieve personal transcendence rather than accept the
immanence imposed by stereotyped gender relationships and repressive
political structures. The suggestion is made that writers can
change the image of women by centralising them as active subjects,
challenging their exclusion and creating spaces for women to
represent themselves / English Studies / M.A. (English)
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Experiments in freedom : representations of identity in new South African drama : an investigation into identity formations in some post-apartheid play-texts published in English by South African writers, from 1994 - 2007Krueger, Anton Robert 28 October 2008 (has links)
This thesis examines ways in which identities have been represented in new South African play texts. It begins by exploring various ways in which identity has been described from various philosophical, psychological and anthropological perspectives. In particular, the thesis describes its methodology in terms of Gilles Deleuze's definition of "rhizomatic" structures. The introduction also elaborates ways in which drama is uniquely suited to represent ¨C as well as to effect ¨C transformations of identity. The thesis then moves on to an examination of specific texts in terms of four broad areas of investigation ¨C gender, political affiliation, ethnicity and syncretism. In these chapters a number of play texts are investigated from different points of view. Firstly, in a chapter on gender, the thesis focuses specifically on issues of masculinity and exile in plays by Athol Fugard, Anthony Akerman and Zakes Mda. This chapter explores orientations of the masculine which have become embedded within notions of nationalism and patriotism. In terms of political affiliations, the thesis looks at what Loren Kruger has called "post-anti-apartheid theatre" (2002: 233) and considers the trend away from protest theatre. With reference to the plays of Mike van Graan it also examines new forms of protest theatre. This chapter also explores plays which were inspired by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) and looks in more detail at Ubu and the Truth Commission by Jane Taylor. When considering ethnicities, the thesis reflects on how identity in terms of an ethnic collective is most often premised on laws of exclusion, and on the construction of what Benedict Anderson refers to as an "imagined community" (1991: 15). Representations of ethnic identities are then analysed in Happy Natives by Greig Coetzee. Syncretism seems to present a preferable description of how South African identities can be constructed and the thesis then elaborates attempts to forge a new identity in terms of amalgamation and a creative fusion of cultural resources, with particular reference to the plays of Brett Bailey and Reza de Wet. In the conclusion of this thesis, the thorny issue of racial identities is considered, and in particular the trope of the "rainbow nation", which many writers regard as a problematic blanketing description which cancels out difference. Instead, Ashraf Jamal's "radical syncretism", which does not seek to subsume heterogeneous identities, is suggested as a viable means of approaching definitions of identity. The final chapter also briefly touches on the development of physical theatre in South Africa and describes how the body can be used as a tool for transformation, relying principally on the writings of Mark Fleishman and Eugenio Barba in this regard. Finally, again resorting to a Deleuzian vocabulary which describes identity as constructed in terms of lines operating on particular planes, the thesis considers whether it may not be more beneficial in the post-apartheid context to favour paradoxical processes which relinquish identities, instead of those which attempt to consolidate them. @ 2008 Author Please cite as follows: Krueger, AR 2008, Experiments in freedom : representations of identity in new South African drama : an investigation into identity formations in some post-apartheid play-texts published in English by South African writers, from 1994 - 2007, DLitt thesis, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd < http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-10282008-141823/ > D497/gm / Thesis (DLitt)--University of Pretoria, 2008. / English / unrestricted
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