Negotiating the Past: The Making of Memory in South AfricaSarah Nuttall, Carli Coetzee Nations as well as individuals are in many ways the sum of their memories, which are shaped by perception as much as by events. This collection of essays by South African academics looks at the ways the country is dealing with its past, a complex mixture of colonialism, slavery, apartheid,struggle, and guilt. The emphasis is on how that past is being perceived and moulded in the post-apartheid era. |
Contents
NJABULO NDEBELE | 19 |
postapartheid narrative | 29 |
ANTHONY HOLIDAY | 43 |
Copyright | |
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activists advertising African languages apartheid Argus asylum autobiography become black South Africans Bleek Bushman Cape Muslim Cape Town century chapter claims collective memory colonial Coloured constitution construction context cultural democratic discourse display District Six ethnic exhibition experience film forgetting forgiveness freedom Griqua healing heritage historians Holocaust Holocaust memory human rights ibid identity imagination individual interpretation Kabbo Kerry Ward Khoi Khoisan KrotoƤ landscape living Lucy Lloyd Mamre Mandela meaning metaphor Miscast monument moral mother museum practice Muslim narrative nationalist Nelson Mandela objects official Onselen oral history personal memory photographs political present prison public memory racial recent remembered represented resistance Robben Island role silences Skotnes slave past slavery social history society Soho Soho's space story struggle symbolic testimony tion TRC's Truth and Reconciliation University of Cape versions voices Weekend Argus Western Cape Wilhelm Bleek writing Xhosa