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Isixhosa interpretations of the Nongqawuse saga: oral narratives and theatrical performances of the Nongqawuse story

The subject of this thesis is centred on the creative and linguistic interpretations (in English and isiXhosa) of the Nongqawuse prophecy and the cattle-killing of 1856-1857. By examining a range of historical, cultural and anthropological sources, the study foregrounds traditional African theatre e...

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Main Author: Yani, Sikhumbuzo
Other Authors: Dowling,Tessa
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: School of Languages and Literatures 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Yani, Sikhumbuzo
author2 Dowling,Tessa
author_browse Dowling,Tessa
Yani, Sikhumbuzo
author_facet Dowling,Tessa
Yani, Sikhumbuzo
author_sort Yani, Sikhumbuzo
collection Thesis
description The subject of this thesis is centred on the creative and linguistic interpretations (in English and isiXhosa) of the Nongqawuse prophecy and the cattle-killing of 1856-1857. By examining a range of historical, cultural and anthropological sources, the study foregrounds traditional African theatre elements as well as language as being important to a fresh understanding and appreciation of the Nongqawuse story. Using textual analysis as a methodological choice, the study analyses H.I.E Dhlomo’s The Girl Who Killed to Save, Xolani Mkonko’s Nongqawuse: a dissertation of true lies and Brett Bailey’s The Prophet to locate the linguistic construct of the plays as well as their theatrical and performative aesthetics. The study adopts the Afrocentric theory in order to interrogate the texts within a decolonial context and locates the Nongqawuse prophecy and the eventual cattle killing as a narrative that communicates the traditional, cultural, historical and spiritual universe that defines amaXhosa of South Africa. While taking as its subject an event from more than 150 years ago, and literary debates from shortly after, my study has been able to contribute robustly to wider conversations that relate to the Nongqawuse prophecy and cattle killing and how the history is reshaped by African voices in terms of language and performance tradition. Added to this, the study contributes to the field of African languages by critiquing how these dramatic works, which focus on Nongqawuse’s prophecy, creatively and refreshingly are inspired by Xhosa genres of orature and storytelling, set within a period of great upheaval due to missionary and colonial influences.
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language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:42.829Z
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:11427/30344 Isixhosa interpretations of the Nongqawuse saga: oral narratives and theatrical performances of the Nongqawuse story Yani, Sikhumbuzo Dowling,Tessa Motinyane, Mantoa The subject of this thesis is centred on the creative and linguistic interpretations (in English and isiXhosa) of the Nongqawuse prophecy and the cattle-killing of 1856-1857. By examining a range of historical, cultural and anthropological sources, the study foregrounds traditional African theatre elements as well as language as being important to a fresh understanding and appreciation of the Nongqawuse story. Using textual analysis as a methodological choice, the study analyses H.I.E Dhlomo’s The Girl Who Killed to Save, Xolani Mkonko’s Nongqawuse: a dissertation of true lies and Brett Bailey’s The Prophet to locate the linguistic construct of the plays as well as their theatrical and performative aesthetics. The study adopts the Afrocentric theory in order to interrogate the texts within a decolonial context and locates the Nongqawuse prophecy and the eventual cattle killing as a narrative that communicates the traditional, cultural, historical and spiritual universe that defines amaXhosa of South Africa. While taking as its subject an event from more than 150 years ago, and literary debates from shortly after, my study has been able to contribute robustly to wider conversations that relate to the Nongqawuse prophecy and cattle killing and how the history is reshaped by African voices in terms of language and performance tradition. Added to this, the study contributes to the field of African languages by critiquing how these dramatic works, which focus on Nongqawuse’s prophecy, creatively and refreshingly are inspired by Xhosa genres of orature and storytelling, set within a period of great upheaval due to missionary and colonial influences. 2019-07-29T10:50:13Z 2019-07-29T10:50:13Z 2019 2019-07-25T12:02:30Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30344 Eng application/pdf School of Languages and Literatures Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Yani, Sikhumbuzo
Isixhosa interpretations of the Nongqawuse saga: oral narratives and theatrical performances of the Nongqawuse story
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Isixhosa interpretations of the Nongqawuse saga: oral narratives and theatrical performances of the Nongqawuse story
title_full Isixhosa interpretations of the Nongqawuse saga: oral narratives and theatrical performances of the Nongqawuse story
title_fullStr Isixhosa interpretations of the Nongqawuse saga: oral narratives and theatrical performances of the Nongqawuse story
title_full_unstemmed Isixhosa interpretations of the Nongqawuse saga: oral narratives and theatrical performances of the Nongqawuse story
title_short Isixhosa interpretations of the Nongqawuse saga: oral narratives and theatrical performances of the Nongqawuse story
title_sort isixhosa interpretations of the nongqawuse saga oral narratives and theatrical performances of the nongqawuse story
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30344
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