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The Individuated Collective Utterance: Lack, Law and Desire in the Autobiographies of Ellen Kuzwayo and Sindiwe Magona

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dc.contributor.author Masemola, Kgomotso
dc.date.accessioned 2015-04-15T11:15:20Z
dc.date.available 2015-04-15T11:15:20Z
dc.date.issued 2010-02
dc.identifier.citation Masemola, Kgomotso 2010. The Individuated Collective Utterance: Lack, Law and Desire in the Autobiographies of Ellen Kuzwayo and Sindiwe Magona, Journal of Literary Studies, 26:1, 111-134 en
dc.identifier.issn 0256-4718
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18475
dc.description.abstract This article signposts the discussion of autobiographical selfing through figures of cultural memory that are a function of double consciousness and double temporality. Two exemplary autobiographies, one by Ellen Kuzwayo and one by Sindiwe Magona, are shown to evince complex ontological formations between which the gap in representing the self of experience and the writing self is radically repeated in the multiplicity of individual articulation of collective agency. The paradox of individual-collective articulation bespeaks the “gap” of writing in double temporality. The article explores that “gap” between Darstellung and Vertretung1 on the premise that it evocatively refers to the slippage or instability of “Truth” written from the exergue of margins of the borderline texts of remembrance in the autobiographies of two black women. For these women’s writing runs parallel – and gives testimony – to their central involvement in the urban township communities as social workers and mothers or, if you will, private and public figures. In this politicised private-public dialectical movement, the autobiographies under discussion take on a Kafkaesque dimension of what Deleuze & Guattari (1986) consistently call a “minor literature”. The article ultimately brings to view the extent to which the mark of history as a territorial machine is inscribed upon the body of the autobiographical subject, and how it produces a representational crisis that unwittingly provides – rather than strictly regulates – the conditions of possibility for even more radical memoric testimony to history and becoming in self-writing. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Routledge en
dc.subject autobiography en
dc.subject Ellen Kuzwayo en
dc.subject Sindiwe Magona en
dc.subject self-writing en
dc.subject self representation en
dc.subject Forced to Grow en
dc.subject Call Me Woman en
dc.subject minor literature en
dc.title The Individuated Collective Utterance: Lack, Law and Desire in the Autobiographies of Ellen Kuzwayo and Sindiwe Magona en
dc.type Article en


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