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Questions for Amma: Tracing the manifestations of violence on the South African Indian Female body

“[i]n the eyes of the law, a woman is both Eve and Eva. As a pure, fragile female she must be specially protected; as a seductive object, from whom men must be protected. In both cases women are the victims” (Navi Pillay in Gqola, 2015: 36). This research investigates performance as a medium through...

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Main Author: Naicker, Kivithra
Other Authors: Jephta, Amy
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Drama 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Naicker, Kivithra
author2 Jephta, Amy
author_browse Jephta, Amy
Naicker, Kivithra
author_facet Jephta, Amy
Naicker, Kivithra
author_sort Naicker, Kivithra
collection Thesis
description “[i]n the eyes of the law, a woman is both Eve and Eva. As a pure, fragile female she must be specially protected; as a seductive object, from whom men must be protected. In both cases women are the victims” (Navi Pillay in Gqola, 2015: 36). This research investigates performance as a medium through which the South African Indian female body transgresses and transcends the limitations and barriers of identity, culture and society. As this study positions the brown female body as a site for violence and codification, it challenges the mythical and stereotypically gendered representations of brown females in media and culture. In examining the performance of gender through the performative case studies supporting this research, this study critically engages with the fluid and shifting territory of identity and culture, tracing a feminist tradition beyond western notions, challenging overlooked cultural and domestic injustices which perpetuate a culture of patriarchy. Rape culture thrives on manufacturing power and fear, with rape being “sexualised violence” that has “survived as long as it has because it works to keep patriarchy intact” (Gqola, 2015: 21). Through performance, this study documents the manifestations of violence on the brown female body, theoretically engaging with how subtle and surreptitious forms of violence work to reinforce patriarchy playing into rape culture, perpetuating a cycle of oppression. In examining the 'tradition’ of Indian theatre in South Africa, this research examines the theatrical devices used to express anxieties, crisis of identity and representation, focusing on the South African Indian female experience through an auto-ethnographical study interrogating my identity and position as a South African Indian (Hindu-Tamil) female, artist, and feminist scholar. This study also unpacks the complexities and contradictions embedded within the representations of the brown female body in theatre, 'Indian’ and Hindu culture through a feminist lens, arguing that gender stereotypes perpetuate a cycle of oppression; highlighting ways in which the brown female body is trained and disciplined into performing as an Indian woman.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29586 Questions for Amma: Tracing the manifestations of violence on the South African Indian Female body Naicker, Kivithra Jephta, Amy Drama “[i]n the eyes of the law, a woman is both Eve and Eva. As a pure, fragile female she must be specially protected; as a seductive object, from whom men must be protected. In both cases women are the victims” (Navi Pillay in Gqola, 2015: 36). This research investigates performance as a medium through which the South African Indian female body transgresses and transcends the limitations and barriers of identity, culture and society. As this study positions the brown female body as a site for violence and codification, it challenges the mythical and stereotypically gendered representations of brown females in media and culture. In examining the performance of gender through the performative case studies supporting this research, this study critically engages with the fluid and shifting territory of identity and culture, tracing a feminist tradition beyond western notions, challenging overlooked cultural and domestic injustices which perpetuate a culture of patriarchy. Rape culture thrives on manufacturing power and fear, with rape being “sexualised violence” that has “survived as long as it has because it works to keep patriarchy intact” (Gqola, 2015: 21). Through performance, this study documents the manifestations of violence on the brown female body, theoretically engaging with how subtle and surreptitious forms of violence work to reinforce patriarchy playing into rape culture, perpetuating a cycle of oppression. In examining the 'tradition’ of Indian theatre in South Africa, this research examines the theatrical devices used to express anxieties, crisis of identity and representation, focusing on the South African Indian female experience through an auto-ethnographical study interrogating my identity and position as a South African Indian (Hindu-Tamil) female, artist, and feminist scholar. This study also unpacks the complexities and contradictions embedded within the representations of the brown female body in theatre, 'Indian’ and Hindu culture through a feminist lens, arguing that gender stereotypes perpetuate a cycle of oppression; highlighting ways in which the brown female body is trained and disciplined into performing as an Indian woman. 2019-02-18T10:09:49Z 2019-02-18T10:09:49Z 2018 2019-02-18T09:32:55Z Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29586 eng application/pdf Department of Drama Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Drama
Naicker, Kivithra
Questions for Amma: Tracing the manifestations of violence on the South African Indian Female body
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Questions for Amma: Tracing the manifestations of violence on the South African Indian Female body
title_full Questions for Amma: Tracing the manifestations of violence on the South African Indian Female body
title_fullStr Questions for Amma: Tracing the manifestations of violence on the South African Indian Female body
title_full_unstemmed Questions for Amma: Tracing the manifestations of violence on the South African Indian Female body
title_short Questions for Amma: Tracing the manifestations of violence on the South African Indian Female body
title_sort questions for amma tracing the manifestations of violence on the south african indian female body
topic Drama
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29586
work_keys_str_mv AT naickerkivithra questionsforammatracingthemanifestationsofviolenceonthesouthafricanindianfemalebody