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Division of the earth : gender, symbolism and the archaeology of the southern San

Bibliography: pages 180-207.

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Main Author: Solomon, Anne Catherine
Other Authors: Parkington, John
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Archaeology 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Solomon, Anne Catherine
author2 Parkington, John
author_browse Parkington, John
Solomon, Anne Catherine
author_facet Parkington, John
Solomon, Anne Catherine
author_sort Solomon, Anne Catherine
collection Thesis
description Bibliography: pages 180-207.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:52:44.497Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Department of Archaeology
publisherStr Department of Archaeology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/21818 Division of the earth : gender, symbolism and the archaeology of the southern San Solomon, Anne Catherine Parkington, John San (African people) - Social life and customs. Sex role - South Africa Rock paintings - South Africa Archaeology Bibliography: pages 180-207. Gender studies in various disciplines, particularly anthropology, have shown that the opposition of masculine : feminine is commonly used to structure other cultural contrasts, and that the representation of this opposition in cultural products is in turn implicated in the cultural construction of gender content. This bidirectional problematic, supplementing the more limited critique of gender 'bias' and masculinist models, is the focus of this research into archaeological materials. Rock art is the principal archaeological 'trace' analysed. Because the impetus to gender studies comes principally from the critical standpoint of feminism, analyses of gender and gendering in archaeological materials are evaluated in the context of gender issues in the present day, in terms of archaeological 'reconstructions' as legitimising the existing gender order. Theoretical influences include feminism, hermeneutics, marxism, (post)- structuralism, semiotics, and discourse theory. Aspects of language, and, particularly, the oral narratives of various San groups - the /Xam, G /wi, !Kung, Nharo, and others - are examined in order to establish the way in which masculinity and femininity are/have been conceptualised and differentiated by San peoples. This is followed by an assessment of the manner of and extent to which the masculine: feminine opposition informs narrative content and structure. The analysis of language texts permits an approach to the representation of this opposition in non-language cultural texts (such as visual art, space). Particular constructions of masculinity and femininity, and a number of gendered contrasts (pertaining to form, orientation, time, number, quality) are identified. Gender symbolism is linked to the themes of rain and fertility/ continuity, and analysed in political terms, according to the feminist materialist contention that, in non-class societies, gender opposition is potentially the impetus to social change. Gender(ing) is more fundamental to San cultural texts than has been, recognised, being present in a range of beliefs which are linked by their gender symbolism. I utilise a 'fertility hypothesis', derived from a reading of the ethnographies, in order to explain various elements of Southern African rock art, Well-preserved (thus relatively recent) paintings, principally from sites in the Drakensberg and south-western Cape, were selected. Features interpreted via this hypothesis include: images of humans, the motif of the thin red line fringed with white dots, 'elephants in boxes', therianthropic figures, and 'androgynous' figures, including the eland. The spatial organisation of the art, the significance of non-realistic perspectives, and the problem of the numerical male dominance of the art are also interpreted from this standpoint. The analysis permits critique, of the theorisation of gender and ideology in rock art studies, and of the biophysical determinism implicit in current rock art studies, in which attempts are made to explain many features of the art by reference to trance states, altered consciousness and neurophysiological constitution. Rain, rather than trance, is proposed as the central element of San ritual/religious practices. Finally, the treatment of (or failure to consider) gender(ing) in the archaeological record is situated in relatio.n to contemporary gender ideologies, in the contexts of archaeological theory and practice. 2016-09-20T12:30:22Z 2016-09-20T12:30:22Z 1989 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/21818 eng application/pdf Department of Archaeology Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle San (African people) - Social life and customs.
Sex role - South Africa
Rock paintings - South Africa
Archaeology
Solomon, Anne Catherine
Division of the earth : gender, symbolism and the archaeology of the southern San
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Division of the earth : gender, symbolism and the archaeology of the southern San
title_full Division of the earth : gender, symbolism and the archaeology of the southern San
title_fullStr Division of the earth : gender, symbolism and the archaeology of the southern San
title_full_unstemmed Division of the earth : gender, symbolism and the archaeology of the southern San
title_short Division of the earth : gender, symbolism and the archaeology of the southern San
title_sort division of the earth gender symbolism and the archaeology of the southern san
topic San (African people) - Social life and customs.
Sex role - South Africa
Rock paintings - South Africa
Archaeology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/21818
work_keys_str_mv AT solomonannecatherine divisionoftheearthgendersymbolismandthearchaeologyofthesouthernsan