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Reclaiming histories: The resounding call issued through the Simonites culturally-marginalised memory of the apartheid forced removals

Produced with the intent to link the consciousness of the classified coloured Simonites to the needs presented by their physical surroundings, this study presents a poststructuralist critique of the post-apartheid culture of race. It invokes the Simonites' production of a living, inclusive and diver...

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Main Author: Solomons, Anastasia Joan
Other Authors: Scanlon, Helen
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Political Studies 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Solomons, Anastasia Joan
author2 Scanlon, Helen
author_browse Scanlon, Helen
Solomons, Anastasia Joan
author_facet Scanlon, Helen
Solomons, Anastasia Joan
author_sort Solomons, Anastasia Joan
collection Thesis
description Produced with the intent to link the consciousness of the classified coloured Simonites to the needs presented by their physical surroundings, this study presents a poststructuralist critique of the post-apartheid culture of race. It invokes the Simonites' production of a living, inclusive and diversified archive as a disruptor to the existing colonial and apartheid power relations that structure social interactions. The study deploys oral history as a methodology due to its fluid administering of historical production. This study is a testament to the Simonites' agency pertaining their reclaimed histories and personhoods. These phenomena are intentionally pluralised to oppose a singularised, state-imposed culture of race that culturally-marginalises memories, histories and identities. An analysis of the Simonites' memory of the apartheid forced removals reveals that their memory is framed to meet a present cultural demand. Namely, the need to transform their culturally-marginalised social position as administered by the rainbow identity and subsequent citizenship status. Reclaimed histories are transformative to the extent that it produces a re-envisioned humanity that subverts existing power relations and appeals to greater society. A subversion of power relations reinvigorates a sense of belonging, broadens the recipients of state obligations and epistemologically undermines the dominance of racial discourse in a post-apartheid context. Therefore, this study supports an emerging discourse that posits Simon's Town as an ancestrally-diverse heritage landscape to which belonging and a unique history is claimed.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40651
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:43:07.906Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Department of Political Studies
publisherStr Department of Political Studies
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40651 Reclaiming histories: The resounding call issued through the Simonites culturally-marginalised memory of the apartheid forced removals Solomons, Anastasia Joan Scanlon, Helen Political Studies Produced with the intent to link the consciousness of the classified coloured Simonites to the needs presented by their physical surroundings, this study presents a poststructuralist critique of the post-apartheid culture of race. It invokes the Simonites' production of a living, inclusive and diversified archive as a disruptor to the existing colonial and apartheid power relations that structure social interactions. The study deploys oral history as a methodology due to its fluid administering of historical production. This study is a testament to the Simonites' agency pertaining their reclaimed histories and personhoods. These phenomena are intentionally pluralised to oppose a singularised, state-imposed culture of race that culturally-marginalises memories, histories and identities. An analysis of the Simonites' memory of the apartheid forced removals reveals that their memory is framed to meet a present cultural demand. Namely, the need to transform their culturally-marginalised social position as administered by the rainbow identity and subsequent citizenship status. Reclaimed histories are transformative to the extent that it produces a re-envisioned humanity that subverts existing power relations and appeals to greater society. A subversion of power relations reinvigorates a sense of belonging, broadens the recipients of state obligations and epistemologically undermines the dominance of racial discourse in a post-apartheid context. Therefore, this study supports an emerging discourse that posits Simon's Town as an ancestrally-diverse heritage landscape to which belonging and a unique history is claimed. 2024-10-30T07:36:39Z 2024-10-30T07:36:39Z 2024 2024-07-09T13:02:28Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40651 Eng application/pdf Department of Political Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Political Studies
Solomons, Anastasia Joan
Reclaiming histories: The resounding call issued through the Simonites culturally-marginalised memory of the apartheid forced removals
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Reclaiming histories: The resounding call issued through the Simonites culturally-marginalised memory of the apartheid forced removals
title_full Reclaiming histories: The resounding call issued through the Simonites culturally-marginalised memory of the apartheid forced removals
title_fullStr Reclaiming histories: The resounding call issued through the Simonites culturally-marginalised memory of the apartheid forced removals
title_full_unstemmed Reclaiming histories: The resounding call issued through the Simonites culturally-marginalised memory of the apartheid forced removals
title_short Reclaiming histories: The resounding call issued through the Simonites culturally-marginalised memory of the apartheid forced removals
title_sort reclaiming histories the resounding call issued through the simonites culturally marginalised memory of the apartheid forced removals
topic Political Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40651
work_keys_str_mv AT solomonsanastasiajoan reclaiminghistoriestheresoundingcallissuedthroughthesimonitesculturallymarginalisedmemoryoftheapartheidforcedremovals