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The Question of Genre Classification in the Drama Series “Ubizo: The Calling (2007)”

The paper argues that the South African television series, Ubizo: The Calling (d/Krijay Govender, 2007) blends elements of psychological thrillers, horrors as well as the gothic genre. The relationship of these subgenres is discussed in this paper in the context of the African spiritual practice of...

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Main Author: Mjoli, Zingisa Noluvuyo
Other Authors: Modisane, Litheko
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Centre for Film and Media Studies 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mjoli, Zingisa Noluvuyo
author2 Modisane, Litheko
author_browse Mjoli, Zingisa Noluvuyo
Modisane, Litheko
author_facet Modisane, Litheko
Mjoli, Zingisa Noluvuyo
author_sort Mjoli, Zingisa Noluvuyo
collection Thesis
description The paper argues that the South African television series, Ubizo: The Calling (d/Krijay Govender, 2007) blends elements of psychological thrillers, horrors as well as the gothic genre. The relationship of these subgenres is discussed in this paper in the context of the African spiritual practice of divine calling that is narrated by the series. The paper concludes that genre classification in this series is left unclear, whether it is horror or psychological thriller as suggested by its producers. For most parts of the series, horror conventions can be identified from the way the characters are set to the types of props and iconographies, as well as the set design and shot sizes of most scenes. Towards the end of the series, however, it changes focus thematically to fit a category that cannot be confined to one genre type. The effort of this research is to present concerns about the way in which some African spiritual practices are likened to sorcery due to the obsession with madness and ghosts. I used Indigenous Knowledge Systems together with genre analysis to arrive at my findings which were important in shedding light to the fact that some genres become less effective when they have been ideologically moved to other cultures. Upon on embarking on this research, I wanted to arrive at the certainty that western borrowed genres were bastardising African practices using foreign jargon and visuality to depict African spirituality. Indeed, the research was constructed in a manner that it simply wanted to confirm something that I, the author desperately wanted to believe. However, my own work has challenged me to acknowledge that these two can coexist.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37612
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:51.499Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Centre for Film and Media Studies
publisherStr Centre for Film and Media Studies
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37612 The Question of Genre Classification in the Drama Series “Ubizo: The Calling (2007)” Mjoli, Zingisa Noluvuyo Modisane, Litheko African Cinema The paper argues that the South African television series, Ubizo: The Calling (d/Krijay Govender, 2007) blends elements of psychological thrillers, horrors as well as the gothic genre. The relationship of these subgenres is discussed in this paper in the context of the African spiritual practice of divine calling that is narrated by the series. The paper concludes that genre classification in this series is left unclear, whether it is horror or psychological thriller as suggested by its producers. For most parts of the series, horror conventions can be identified from the way the characters are set to the types of props and iconographies, as well as the set design and shot sizes of most scenes. Towards the end of the series, however, it changes focus thematically to fit a category that cannot be confined to one genre type. The effort of this research is to present concerns about the way in which some African spiritual practices are likened to sorcery due to the obsession with madness and ghosts. I used Indigenous Knowledge Systems together with genre analysis to arrive at my findings which were important in shedding light to the fact that some genres become less effective when they have been ideologically moved to other cultures. Upon on embarking on this research, I wanted to arrive at the certainty that western borrowed genres were bastardising African practices using foreign jargon and visuality to depict African spirituality. Indeed, the research was constructed in a manner that it simply wanted to confirm something that I, the author desperately wanted to believe. However, my own work has challenged me to acknowledge that these two can coexist. 2023-03-31T08:23:26Z 2023-03-31T08:23:26Z 2022 2023-03-30T09:49:42Z Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37612 eng application/pdf Centre for Film and Media Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle African Cinema
Mjoli, Zingisa Noluvuyo
The Question of Genre Classification in the Drama Series “Ubizo: The Calling (2007)”
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The Question of Genre Classification in the Drama Series “Ubizo: The Calling (2007)”
title_full The Question of Genre Classification in the Drama Series “Ubizo: The Calling (2007)”
title_fullStr The Question of Genre Classification in the Drama Series “Ubizo: The Calling (2007)”
title_full_unstemmed The Question of Genre Classification in the Drama Series “Ubizo: The Calling (2007)”
title_short The Question of Genre Classification in the Drama Series “Ubizo: The Calling (2007)”
title_sort question of genre classification in the drama series ubizo the calling 2007
topic African Cinema
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37612
work_keys_str_mv AT mjolizingisanoluvuyo thequestionofgenreclassificationinthedramaseriesubizothecalling2007
AT mjolizingisanoluvuyo questionofgenreclassificationinthedramaseriesubizothecalling2007