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How I lost my mother : care, death, and the politics of invisibility

Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2020.

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Main Author: Swartz, Leslie
Other Authors: Viljoen, Shaun
Format: Thesis
Language:en_ZA
Published: Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Swartz, Leslie
author2 Viljoen, Shaun
author_browse Swartz, Leslie
Viljoen, Shaun
author_facet Viljoen, Shaun
Swartz, Leslie
author_sort Swartz, Leslie
collection Thesis
dc_rights_str_mv Stellenbosch University
description Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2020.
format Thesis
id oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/109089
institution Stellenbosch University (South Africa)
language en_ZA
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:45:20.375Z
license_str Other — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from SUNScholar — Stellenbosch University Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
publisherStr Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
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source_str SUNScholar — Stellenbosch University Repository
spelling oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/109089 How I lost my mother : care, death, and the politics of invisibility Swartz, Leslie Viljoen, Shaun Green, Louise Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. Dept. of English. Creative nonfiction Memoir writing techniques Autobiography -- Authorship -- Study and teaching How I lost my mother -- History and criticism UCTD Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2020. ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This creative writing dissertation falls into two sections. The bulk of the dissertation is a book-length memoir entitled How I lost my mother, and the brief second section provides a reflection on the memoir and the process of writing. The memoir uses the techniques of narrative nonfiction to introduce readers to issues of care and dying. The memoir tells the story of an emotionally complex relationship between mother and son, and of the struggles we all face in negotiating our way between closeness and distance, tenderness, anger and retribution. The book uses humour and story-telling to discuss issues which may otherwise not be palatable to a wide range of readers. The book maintains a deliberate tension between three narrative strands. First, the book functions in part as a social history of marginal Jewish life in southern Africa from the 1920s to today, with a critical look at the social demands and expectations of a close-knit community. Second, there is a raw account of a fraught but loving family relationship. Third, this is a book about loss, death, and the invisibilization of care issues. Many privileged people live their lives, and go through the process of dying, supported by vulnerable and poorly-paid people (usually women of colour), and the book discusses this reality. To an extent, my intentions in writing the book are didactic, but the book is written as a story about family life, and it invites co-construction of meaning rather than positioning the reader as somebody who needs to be taught. I hope that by showing my own doubts and my own struggles with issues, I invite the reader to think along with me. The book also deals the politics of memory and memorialization, which remains an important and contested issue in contemporary South Africa. Who has the right to speak about the past? Whose memories are “true”, to the extent that that it is possible to have “true memories”? Who gets to tell the stories? Who ends up as a writer famed for chronicling a particular conflict context (like Nadine Gordimer and Anne Frank), and whose stories will never be chronicled? What responsibilities do all story-tellers have to the past, and to what extent can people claim not to be constrained, shaped, and enabled by a past they inherited through good or bad fortune, or, more usually, an intertwined combination of both good and bad? Section 2 of the dissertation provides a critical reflection on the writing of the memoir and on questions of ethics, authenticity, and subjectivity in relation to life-writing more generally. I draw on writers from a range of periods and contexts to consider these issues, noting the inherent difficulties and contradictions of a writer commenting on his or her own writing. In keeping with other authors, I suggest that personal narratives may be a helpful way to communicate complex, and broader, concerns. AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie proefskrif in kreatiewe skryfkunde val in twee dele uit. Die grootste gedeelte van die proefskrif is ‘n boeklange gedenkskrif met die titel, How I lost my mother, en die kort tweede deel is ‘n besinning oor die gedenkskrif en die skryfproses. In die gedenkskrif word verhalende nie-fiksie as tegniek gebruik om lesers bekend te stel aan kwessies wat met sorg en sterwe te make het. Die gedenkskrif vertel die verhaal van ‘n emosioneel-ingewikkelde verhouding tussen moeder en seun en die stryd waarmee ons almal gekonfronteer word, terwyl ons die weg deur nabyheid en afstand, teerheid, woede en vergelding vind. Humor en storievertelling word in die boek aangewend om kwessies, wat andersins nie aangenaam vir ‘n wye leserskap sou wees nie, te bespreek. Die boek hou ‘n doelbewuste spanning tussen drie narratiewe drade vol. Eerstens, funksioneer die boek deels as ‘n sosiale geskiedenis van die gemarginaliseerde Joodse lewe in Suider-Afrika vanaf die 1920s tot op hede, met ‘n kritiese blik op die sosiale eise en verwagtinge van ‘n hegte gemeenskap. Tweedens, dien dit as ‘n verslagdoening van ‘n belade, maar liefdevolle, familieverhouding. Derdens, handel die boek oor verlies, die dood, en die versteking (invisibilization) van sorgkwessies. Menige bevoorregte persone lei hul lewens, en beleef die sterwensproses, met onderskraging deur kwesbare en swakbetaalde persone (gewoonlik swart vroue), en die boek bespreek hierdie realiteit. Tot ‘n mate is my bedoelinge met die skryf van hierdie boek lerend van aard, maar die boek is geskryf as ‘n storie oor gesinslewe, en dus is dit ‘n uitnodiging tot die gesamentlike uitleg van betekenis, eerder as dat die leser geplaas word in die rol van iemand wat onderrig moet word. Ek hoop dat ek, deurdat ek my eie twyfel en worstelinge met kwessies blootlê, die leser uitnooi om saam met my na te dink. Die boek handel ook oor die politiek verbonde aan geheue en optekening, wat steeds ‘n belangrike en omstrede kwessie in hedendaagse Suid-Afrika bly. Wie het die reg om oor die verlede te praat? Wie se herinneringe is “waar”, tot dié mate dat dit moontik is om “ware herinneringe” te hê? Wie word toegelaat om die stories te vertel? Wie word op die ou ent ‘n skrywer wat beroemdheid verwerf vir die optekening van ‘n besondere konflikkonteks (soos Nadine Gordimer en Anne Frank), en wie se stories sal nooit opgeteken word nie? Watse verantwoordelikhede het alle storievertellers teenoor die verlede en tot watter mate kan persone eis dat hulle nie beperk, gevorm en in staat gestel is deur ‘n verlede wat aan hul nagelaat is deur óf goeie óf slegte geluk, of dan, meer gewoonlik, ‘n vervlegde kombinasie van beide goed en sleg, nie? Deel 2 van die proefskrif besin krities oor die skryf van ‘n gedenkskrif en oor vrae rakende etiek, egtheid en subjektiwiteit in verhouding tot ego-tekste, in die algemeen. Ek beroep my op skrywers uit ‘n verskeidenheid tydperke en agtergronde om hierdie kwessies aan te spreek, terwyl ek kennis neem van die problematiek en teenstrydighede wat eie is daaraan as ‘n skrywer op haar of sy eie werk kommentaar lewer. In ooreenstemming met ander skrywers, stel ek voor dat persoonlike verhale ‘n nuttige manier mag wees om ingewikkelde, en wyer, besorgdhede te kommunikeer. Doctoral 2020-08-31T07:38:07Z 2021-01-31T19:34:53Z 2020-08-31T07:38:07Z 2021-01-31T19:34:53Z 2020-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/109089 en_ZA Stellenbosch University 253 pages application/pdf Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
spellingShingle Creative nonfiction
Memoir writing techniques
Autobiography -- Authorship -- Study and teaching
How I lost my mother -- History and criticism
UCTD
Swartz, Leslie
How I lost my mother : care, death, and the politics of invisibility
title How I lost my mother : care, death, and the politics of invisibility
title_full How I lost my mother : care, death, and the politics of invisibility
title_fullStr How I lost my mother : care, death, and the politics of invisibility
title_full_unstemmed How I lost my mother : care, death, and the politics of invisibility
title_short How I lost my mother : care, death, and the politics of invisibility
title_sort how i lost my mother care death and the politics of invisibility
topic Creative nonfiction
Memoir writing techniques
Autobiography -- Authorship -- Study and teaching
How I lost my mother -- History and criticism
UCTD
url http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/109089
work_keys_str_mv AT swartzleslie howilostmymothercaredeathandthepoliticsofinvisibility