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Imvotho: Umz'omkhulu Reclamation of Xhosa people's narrative on their relationship with water

This thesis confronts beliefs and perceptions, enforced over time, about the relationship Xhosa people have to water. Unpacking these assists in reclaiming the narrative origins of assumed myths about indigenous cultural beliefs and associations with nature and allows undocumented cultural narrative...

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Main Author: Liwani, Yonela
Other Authors: Thompson, Amy
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Liwani, Yonela
author2 Thompson, Amy
author_browse Liwani, Yonela
Thompson, Amy
author_facet Thompson, Amy
Liwani, Yonela
author_sort Liwani, Yonela
collection Thesis
description This thesis confronts beliefs and perceptions, enforced over time, about the relationship Xhosa people have to water. Unpacking these assists in reclaiming the narrative origins of assumed myths about indigenous cultural beliefs and associations with nature and allows undocumented cultural narratives that are slowly vanishing to be recorded. The fragmented and vanishing narratives impact on the loss of cultural identity of black people. This fragmentation is felt acutely on the Cape Flats where postcolonial migration from the rural Eastern Cape to urban centres has severed the spiritual and emotional relationships with nature, particularly water. Khayelitsha is used as a case study site to reconnect people to their cultural narratives. The site has a highly polluted storm water attenuation pond in the middle of an informal settlement. The site selection was mostly informed by its direct link to the Xhosa people who have migrated from the Eastern Cape, accessibility for the people that the study is about and its inclusion of the environmental issues that exist on the site that further shift water associations and perceptions of the relationship Xhosa people have with water. This dissertation aims to uncover and examine the indigenous cultural systems that functioned in the rural spaces in Eastern Cape settlements, namely eNgcobo. Studying the landforms of water bodies, especially active water spaces and the systemic activities and human roles that occurred within the landforms, seeks to reconcile a urban language that allows for a healthy cultural connection to this natural system. Additionally, by understanding true cultural relationships that exist between people and natural systems within the traditional rural context it will provide design cues to apply in urban areas that allows urban populations to reconnect with their cultural identity and heal the negative perceptions towards water.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:33.643Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics
publisherStr School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35442 Imvotho: Umz'omkhulu Reclamation of Xhosa people's narrative on their relationship with water Liwani, Yonela Thompson, Amy Landscape Architecture This thesis confronts beliefs and perceptions, enforced over time, about the relationship Xhosa people have to water. Unpacking these assists in reclaiming the narrative origins of assumed myths about indigenous cultural beliefs and associations with nature and allows undocumented cultural narratives that are slowly vanishing to be recorded. The fragmented and vanishing narratives impact on the loss of cultural identity of black people. This fragmentation is felt acutely on the Cape Flats where postcolonial migration from the rural Eastern Cape to urban centres has severed the spiritual and emotional relationships with nature, particularly water. Khayelitsha is used as a case study site to reconnect people to their cultural narratives. The site has a highly polluted storm water attenuation pond in the middle of an informal settlement. The site selection was mostly informed by its direct link to the Xhosa people who have migrated from the Eastern Cape, accessibility for the people that the study is about and its inclusion of the environmental issues that exist on the site that further shift water associations and perceptions of the relationship Xhosa people have with water. This dissertation aims to uncover and examine the indigenous cultural systems that functioned in the rural spaces in Eastern Cape settlements, namely eNgcobo. Studying the landforms of water bodies, especially active water spaces and the systemic activities and human roles that occurred within the landforms, seeks to reconcile a urban language that allows for a healthy cultural connection to this natural system. Additionally, by understanding true cultural relationships that exist between people and natural systems within the traditional rural context it will provide design cues to apply in urban areas that allows urban populations to reconnect with their cultural identity and heal the negative perceptions towards water. 2021-12-10T07:41:43Z 2021-12-10T07:41:43Z 2021 2021-12-09T08:46:00Z Master Thesis Masters MLA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35442 eng application/pdf School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Landscape Architecture
Liwani, Yonela
Imvotho: Umz'omkhulu Reclamation of Xhosa people's narrative on their relationship with water
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Imvotho: Umz'omkhulu Reclamation of Xhosa people's narrative on their relationship with water
title_full Imvotho: Umz'omkhulu Reclamation of Xhosa people's narrative on their relationship with water
title_fullStr Imvotho: Umz'omkhulu Reclamation of Xhosa people's narrative on their relationship with water
title_full_unstemmed Imvotho: Umz'omkhulu Reclamation of Xhosa people's narrative on their relationship with water
title_short Imvotho: Umz'omkhulu Reclamation of Xhosa people's narrative on their relationship with water
title_sort imvotho umz omkhulu reclamation of xhosa people s narrative on their relationship with water
topic Landscape Architecture
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35442
work_keys_str_mv AT liwaniyonela imvothoumzomkhulureclamationofxhosapeoplesnarrativeontheirrelationshipwithwater