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Identity, from autobiography to postcoloniality : a study of representations in Puleng's works

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dc.contributor.advisor Serudu, M. S.
dc.contributor.author Mokgoatsana, Sekgothe Ngwato Cedric
dc.date.accessioned 2015-01-23T04:23:53Z
dc.date.available 2015-01-23T04:23:53Z
dc.date.issued 1999-06
dc.identifier.citation Mokgoatsana, Sekgothe Ngwato Cedric (1999) Identity, from autobiography to postcoloniality : a study of representations in Puleng's works, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17481> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17481
dc.description.abstract The issue of identity is receiving the most attention in recent times. Communities, groups and individuals tend to ask themselves who they are after the colonial period. The dawn of modern democracy and the fall of the Berlin Wall have become important sites of self-definition. In this study, I examine narratives of self-invention and selflegitimisation from a variety of texts ranging from poetic to dramatic voices. The author creates characters who represent his wishes, desires and fears in dramatic form. The other characters re-present the other members of his family. He uses autobiographical voices to re-create and re-present history, particularly his family history which has been dismembered by memory's inability to recover the past in its entirety. Memory, visions and dreams are used as tropes to negotiate the pain of loss. These narratives assist him to recapture that which has been lost dearly, and imaginatively re-members what has been dismembered. The autobiographical I shifts into an autobiographical we where the author uses his poetry to lambast the injustices of apartheid. The study further examines some aspects of postcolonial identity, which include the status of African writing and the role of africalogical discourse, the conception of home in apartheid South Africa as well as the juxtaposition of power between indigenes and settlers. These reflect the problem of marginality as a postcolonial condition and how the marginals can be returned to the centre of power. Marginalisation of the indigenes occurs by coercion, inferiorisation, tabooing certain political and cartographical spaces, harassment, torture and imprisonment. Despite these measures, the poetry of NS Puleng persisted to remove the fetish of apartheid disempowerment and disenfranchisement. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xi, 263 leaves)
dc.language.iso en
dc.subject Identity en
dc.subject Postcolonial identity en
dc.subject Postcolonialism and criticism en
dc.subject Postcolonial discourse and indigenous writing en
dc.subject Apartheid city en
dc.subject Settlers and marginals en
dc.subject Home and nativity en
dc.subject Home and away en
dc.subject Autobiography en
dc.subject Autobiographical selves en
dc.subject Autobiographical representation en
dc.subject Postcolonial representation en
dc.subject Africacological discourse en
dc.subject African epistemology vis-a-vis western historicism en
dc.subject.ddc 896.397713209
dc.subject.lcsh Northern Sotho fiction -- History and criticism en
dc.title Identity, from autobiography to postcoloniality : a study of representations in Puleng's works en
dc.type Thesis
dc.description.department African Languages
dc.description.degree D.Litt. et Phil. (African Languages)


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