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Representations of crime, power and social decay in the South African post-colony in the film Gangster’s Paradise: Jerusalema (2008)

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dc.contributor.author Khan, Khatija
dc.date.accessioned 2016-10-12T13:35:02Z
dc.date.available 2016-10-12T13:35:02Z
dc.date.issued 2016-06-13
dc.identifier.citation Khatija Khan (2016) Representations of crime, power and social decay in the South African post-colony in the film Gangster’s Paradise: Jerusalema (2008), Communicatio, 42:2, 210-220, en
dc.identifier.issn 0250-0167
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/21688
dc.description.abstract The film Gangster’s Paradise: Jerusalema, released on August 29, 2008, decries the proliferation of crime, violence and social decay in the South African post-colony. The aim of this article is to interrogate the banality in the use of violence and power in the South African post-colony. The filmic narratives of Gangster’s Paradise: Jerusalema reveal that behind the ‘rainbow’ façade presented by South Africa, one encounters festering poverty in ‘non-white’ communities, racial acrimony, broken promises, social and class struggles, and tales of betrayal of the majority of black people by the elite black leadership which now sit comfortably in the seats vacated by their former colonisers. An analysis of the narratives of the film Gangster’s Paradise: Jerusalema permits one to locate apartheid-based economic disparities as still haunting mainly ‘nonwhite’ local communities, although some whites have not been spared by the vicious new normal of poverty and the effects of corruption. This interpretation is further questioned in the film which shows that, after apartheid, the nationalist leadership encouraged a negative culture of entitlement. The irony in the film is that the masses are also tainted in so far as they commit crimes against other ordinary people and refuse to take responsibility or, rather in an escapist way, blame all the woes of the post-colony on apartheid. Thus, the narratives of Gangster’s Paradise: Jerusalema beg the question: What is going wrong with the dream of democracy for all, irrespective of race, that was the founding principle of the new nation? en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Routledge en
dc.subject film; Jerusalema; rainbow nation, new nation; post-colony; Post-Apartheid South Africa, crime, uses and gratification theory en
dc.title Representations of crime, power and social decay in the South African post-colony in the film Gangster’s Paradise: Jerusalema (2008) en
dc.type Article en


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