Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

The ambiguity of God : a post-colonial inquiry into the politics of theistic formulation in South Africa

Bibliography: leaves 115-131.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Savage, James Peter Tyrone
Other Authors: Villa-Vicencio, Charles
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Religious Studies 2015
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867614139043545089
access_status_str Open Access
author Savage, James Peter Tyrone
author2 Villa-Vicencio, Charles
author_browse Savage, James Peter Tyrone
Villa-Vicencio, Charles
author_facet Villa-Vicencio, Charles
Savage, James Peter Tyrone
author_sort Savage, James Peter Tyrone
collection Thesis
description Bibliography: leaves 115-131.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/14747
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:47:17.363Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Department of Religious Studies
publisherStr Department of Religious Studies
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/14747 The ambiguity of God : a post-colonial inquiry into the politics of theistic formulation in South Africa Savage, James Peter Tyrone Villa-Vicencio, Charles God Race relations - Religious aspects - Christianity Missionaries - South Africa Afrikaners - Religion Christianity and politics - South Africa Bibliography: leaves 115-131. This thesis sets out to locate a post-apartheid perspective within what might be described as postcolonial Religious Studies, drawing on the genealogical method of Michel Foucault. Roughly stated, I understand the methodology to represent a shift away from preoccupation with the actual truth or otherwise of an idea, towards concern with the agitation - the discord, the discrepancies - that characterizes the appearance of an idea. Within the parameters, paradigms and possibilities imposed by this method, I inquire into the politics of theistic formulation in South Africa prior to the Union of South Africa (1910). Part One of the thesis discusses the politics of the advent of the Christian God in Southern Africa. In the three chapters that comprise this section, I situate colonial beliefs about God within colonialism as a discursive genre; in particular, evidence is provided of the deployment of religious (and in particular theistic) sensibility as a strategic category in the Othering discourse by which European expansion into Southern Africa was promulgated. Chapter Two opens by observing that colonial constructions of Otherness served not only to "erase" (Spivak) autochthonic identity, but also to eulogize and assert the colonial Self. Contextualizing my argument in the debate about the ambiguous effects of colonial missionary activities, I examine the mythically imbued, Othering discourse of Robert Moffat as a particularly conspicuous instance of the missionary qua colonial Self. Chapter Three gathers the concerns of Part One around the problem of theistic formulation in a colonial context, by discussing John Colenso's discovery of a theistic sensibility indigenous to autochthonic Africans as an example of a transgression of the Christian discourse that colonialism made function as truth. Part Two makes use of the categories established in Part One, and applies them to Afrikanerdom: its Othering in British colonial discourse; its religiously imbued, mythic history; and its beliefs in God. Having brought to theistic formulation a Foucauldian suspicion of systems of truth, my argument turns in Part Three to bring a particular theology, theologia crucis, alongside Foucault: accepting that the "dogmatic finitization" (Wolfhart Pannenberg) of Christian belief is inherently susceptible to the play of power, I observe that theistic formulation cast in terms of the cross - the "Crucified God" (Jurgen Moltmann) - holds a subversive potential in which may lie possibilities for an alternative to "truth". 2015-11-08T05:12:51Z 2015-11-08T05:12:51Z 1997 Master Thesis Masters MSocSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14747 eng application/pdf Department of Religious Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle God
Race relations - Religious aspects - Christianity
Missionaries - South Africa
Afrikaners - Religion
Christianity and politics - South Africa
Savage, James Peter Tyrone
The ambiguity of God : a post-colonial inquiry into the politics of theistic formulation in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The ambiguity of God : a post-colonial inquiry into the politics of theistic formulation in South Africa
title_full The ambiguity of God : a post-colonial inquiry into the politics of theistic formulation in South Africa
title_fullStr The ambiguity of God : a post-colonial inquiry into the politics of theistic formulation in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed The ambiguity of God : a post-colonial inquiry into the politics of theistic formulation in South Africa
title_short The ambiguity of God : a post-colonial inquiry into the politics of theistic formulation in South Africa
title_sort ambiguity of god a post colonial inquiry into the politics of theistic formulation in south africa
topic God
Race relations - Religious aspects - Christianity
Missionaries - South Africa
Afrikaners - Religion
Christianity and politics - South Africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14747
work_keys_str_mv AT savagejamespetertyrone theambiguityofgodapostcolonialinquiryintothepoliticsoftheisticformulationinsouthafrica
AT savagejamespetertyrone ambiguityofgodapostcolonialinquiryintothepoliticsoftheisticformulationinsouthafrica