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Narrating the "nation" : cultural production, political community and young Afrikaans readers

Thesis (DLitt (Literary Theory))--University of Pretoria, 2004.

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Other Authors: Roodt, P.H. (Pieter Hendrik)
Format: Thesis
Published: University of Pretoria 2013
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access_status_str Open Access
author2 Roodt, P.H. (Pieter Hendrik)
author_browse Roodt, P.H. (Pieter Hendrik)
author_facet Roodt, P.H. (Pieter Hendrik)
collection Thesis
dc_rights_str_mv © 2004, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the University of Pretoria.
description Thesis (DLitt (Literary Theory))--University of Pretoria, 2004.
format Thesis
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institution University of Pretoria (South Africa)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:40:07.413Z
license_str Other — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UPSpace — University of Pretoria Institutional Repository
publishDate 2013
publishDateRange 2013
publishDateSort 2013
publisher University of Pretoria
publisherStr University of Pretoria
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source_str UPSpace — University of Pretoria Institutional Repository
spelling oai:repository.up.ac.za:2263/28861 Narrating the "nation" : cultural production, political community and young Afrikaans readers Roodt, P.H. (Pieter Hendrik) upetd@up.ac.za Du Plessis, Irma Maasdorp series Organic intellectual Michel de certeau Charles taylor Louis althusser Benedict anderson Antonio gramsci Pierre bourdieu Class Apartheid J.l. van schaik publishers Afrikaner nationalism Stella blakemore Popular fiction Children’s literature Youth literature Keurboslaan series Sexuality Race Gender Formula books UCTD Thesis (DLitt (Literary Theory))--University of Pretoria, 2004. This study explores the relationship between literature and society against the background of the emergence in the 1930s and 1940s in South Africa of a form of Afrikaner nationalism that was spearheaded by members of the Afrikaner petty bourgeoisie and intelligentsia and a subsequent expansion in Afrikaans literary production. It addresses problems of explanation in Afrikaner nationalism by focusing attention on the question of culture, the field of imagination and the domain of everyday life. In particular, the study examines the Keurboslaan series - a series of schoolboy stories aimed at juvenile readers - by Stella Blakemore, and traces the production, circulation and critical reception of the twenty titles in the series. The first title in this series was published in 1941 and the series has been reprinted several times over a number of decades and as recently as 1997. Drawing on the work of Benedict Anderson, this study illuminates the link between the emergence of print capitalism and the production of popular fiction on the one hand and nationalism on the other. Whilst this is a link that is not often explored, an analysis of the Keurboslaan series illustrates that the study of popular fiction can illuminate the practices through which nationalism gains popular support. It is argued that the Keurboslaan series produced a narrative of the Afrikaner ‘nation’ in popular fiction, but that this narrative was not authenticated by the intelligentsia and petty bourgeoisie who were the driving forces behind Afrikaner nationalism and its contents. It is further argued that this ‘narrative of nation’ circulated alongside more official narratives of the ‘nation’ espoused in discourses of religion, science and literature published in Afrikaans. The narrative of ‘nation’ in Keurboslaan – whilst sharing many similarities with official narratives in other discourses – but also differs from those discourses in important respects. It is argued that the popular series was influential precisely because it imagined the Afrikaner ‘nation’ in very different ways and on different terms from those discourses. Moreover, the form in which this narrative was produced, that is popular youth literature, appealed to readers of Afrikaans who were in search of escapist fiction. For these readers, the Keurboslaan series helped to give shape to and created new possibilities for interpreting the world that they inhabited. Reading the school as a corollary of the ‘nation’, it is argued that the narrative of the nation in Keurboslaan series explores the boundaries between the self and the other and posits the self as a danger to the self, resulting in an emphasis on the need to discipline the self. This kind of analysis also creates the space for examining in what ways ideas and identities about ‘race’, gender, sexuality, class and ‘nation’ are constructed in the texts. Yet, the study maintains that whilst the Keurboslaan series contributed to creating a space in which a particular understanding of the self and the world becomes possible, and whereas the reader is not conceived of as a completely free agent that can derive simply any meaning from the text, the study and its theoretical underpinnings do not fully account for individual readers’ engagement with popular texts and the ways in which reading strategies and habits can generate different, ambiguous or inconclusive meanings for readers. It is suggested that a study of popular texts and Afrikaner nationalism employing theories of reading and the reader will complement this analysis. Afrikaans unrestricted 2013-09-07T14:22:57Z 2004-10-20 2013-09-07T14:22:57Z 2004-06-04 2004 2004-10-20 Thesis Du Plessis, I 2004, Narrating the "nation" : cultural production, political community and young Afrikaans readers, DLitt thesis, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd < http://hdl.handle.net/2263/28861 > http://hdl.handle.net/2263/28861 http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-10202004-065934/ © 2004, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the University of Pretoria. application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf University of Pretoria
spellingShingle Maasdorp series
Organic intellectual
Michel de certeau
Charles taylor
Louis althusser
Benedict anderson
Antonio gramsci
Pierre bourdieu
Class
Apartheid
J.l. van schaik publishers
Afrikaner nationalism
Stella blakemore
Popular fiction
Children’s literature
Youth literature
Keurboslaan series
Sexuality
Race
Gender
Formula books
UCTD
Narrating the "nation" : cultural production, political community and young Afrikaans readers
title Narrating the "nation" : cultural production, political community and young Afrikaans readers
title_full Narrating the "nation" : cultural production, political community and young Afrikaans readers
title_fullStr Narrating the "nation" : cultural production, political community and young Afrikaans readers
title_full_unstemmed Narrating the "nation" : cultural production, political community and young Afrikaans readers
title_short Narrating the "nation" : cultural production, political community and young Afrikaans readers
title_sort narrating the nation cultural production political community and young afrikaans readers
topic Maasdorp series
Organic intellectual
Michel de certeau
Charles taylor
Louis althusser
Benedict anderson
Antonio gramsci
Pierre bourdieu
Class
Apartheid
J.l. van schaik publishers
Afrikaner nationalism
Stella blakemore
Popular fiction
Children’s literature
Youth literature
Keurboslaan series
Sexuality
Race
Gender
Formula books
UCTD
url http://hdl.handle.net/2263/28861
http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-10202004-065934/