Representation of displacement in the exhibition Dis-Location/Re-Location

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dc.contributor.advisor Van Eeden, Jeanne en
dc.contributor.coadvisor Dreyer, Elfriede en
dc.contributor.postgraduate Farber, Leora Naomi en
dc.date.accessioned 2013-09-06T14:25:09Z
dc.date.available 2013-06-27 en
dc.date.available 2013-09-06T14:25:09Z
dc.date.created 2013-04-11 en
dc.date.issued 2012 en
dc.date.submitted 2013-03-09 en
dc.description Thesis (DPhil)--University of Pretoria, 2012. en
dc.description.abstract Identity always presupposes a sense of location and a relationship with others and the representation of identity most often occurs precisely at the point when there has been a displacement (Bhabha cited in Papastergiadis 1995:17, emphasis added). In this study I focus on the condition of displacement, placing emphasis on the disjunctures of identity arising from temporal and physical dislocations and relocations in historical and postapartheid South African contexts. Displacement, and the attendant senses of dislocation and alienation it may evoke, is explored with reference to three selected female personae. For each persona, displacement is shown to provoke transmutations in subjectivity and identity, resulting in disjunctive identities and relationships with place. Their individual narratives raise questions around the consequences of displacement for a sense of (un)belonging and the (re)making of identities across geographical, cultural, temporal, ethnic and environmental borders. The pivotal role displacement plays in the processes of formation and transformation of subjectivity and identity is foregrounded. Familial histories of diasporic displacement, together with colonial legacies that have shaped my subject position as a white, middle-class, female South African woman, are interlaced with a recounting of personal experience of displacement in postapartheid South Africa. This personal sense of displacement, experienced between the years 2000 to 2006, is extended to a discussion on what is argued to be collective forms of white, English-speaking South Africans’ dislocation during the same time period. I suggest that their sense of displacement was experienced in relation to the uncertainty of their subject positions in postapartheid South Africa. In the practical and theoretical components of the degree, I consider how the three personae’s subjectivities are practiced and lived from their different space-time continuums. This exploration prompts further questions around how the effects of displacement on subjectivity and new identity formations are contingent upon each persona’s relation to the Other of colonial discourse, or the other-strangerforeigner within. Although there are marked differences between their colonial, diasporic and postcolonial contexts, a central theme that underpins the study is that the three conditions of displacement are linked by disjunctures arising from processes of dislocation, alienation, relocation and adaptation. Each persona’s epistemological reality is shown to comprise multiple ambivalences and ambiguities, and is marked by processes of cultural contestation and inner conflict. Their ambivalences and ambiguities encompass slippages between positions of inclusion and exclusion; insider and outsider; inhabitant and immigrant; alienation and belonging; placelessness and locatedness; homely and unhomely that the experience of uprooting and relocating foregrounds. While displacement is understood in terms of trauma and conflict, this condition is also regarded as a generative space of possibility for the emergence of new identity formations. Using my experiences of self-transformation and renegotiation of my identity through processes of cultural contact and exchange as a departure point, I consider ways in which collective white, English-speaking South Africans’ cultural identities are being reformulated, renegotiated or ‘hybridised’ in postapartheid South Africa as a transforming, postcolonial society. en
dc.description.availability unrestricted en
dc.description.department Visual Arts en
dc.identifier.citation Farber, LN 2012, Representations of displacement in the exhibition Dis-Location/Re-Location, DPhil thesis, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd < http://hdl.handle.net/2263/23070 > en
dc.identifier.other D13/4/698/ag en
dc.identifier.upetdurl http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-03092013-200533/ en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/23070
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher University of Pretoria en_ZA
dc.rights © 2012 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. en
dc.subject Processes of cultural fusion and exchange grafting en
dc.subject Diaspora en
dc.subject Hybridity en
dc.subject Liminality en
dc.subject In flux en
dc.subject Identity as emergent en
dc.subject In process en
dc.subject Postcolonial and post-apartheid identity construct en
dc.subject Politics of displacement en
dc.subject Embodied experience en
dc.subject Reconfiguration of subjectivity and identity en
dc.subject Identities-in-becoming en
dc.subject Heterotopias of crisis en
dc.subject Alienation en
dc.subject Dislocation en
dc.subject Self-other relations en
dc.subject UCTD en_US
dc.title Representation of displacement in the exhibition Dis-Location/Re-Location en
dc.type Thesis en


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