Abstract

This article considered the literary representation of young South Africans coming of age within a post-apartheid, multicultural context and forging for themselves a modern identity across a divide between, and also within, cultures. They identify themselves with the global West, but also subscribe to indigenous African values, whilst recognising how they themselves have been damaged by corrupted cultural practices. Postcolonial theories of identity-formation – Said’s argument that post-imperial cultures are all hybrid and heterogeneous, Bhabha’s interstitial ‘third space’ where postcolonial identities are produced through processes of negotiation and translation, Hall’s theory that cultural identity is based on differences and discontinuities rather than on fixed essences, De Kock’s notion of a ‘cultural seam’ or site where cultures both differ and converge and difference and sameness are sutured together, Nuttall’s notion of entanglement, and Clingman’s theory of the transitive self – are used for understanding how young South Africans are shown in recent writing as having been shaped by traditional cultural practices and also damaged by cultural malpractices. Texts chosen for discussion are Adam Ashforth’s Madumo, about witchcraft, Russell Kaschula’s short story,‘Six teaspoons of sweetness’ and Gcina Mhlope’s short story, ‘Nokulunga’s wedding’, both of which deal with ukuthwala [forced marriage abduction] and, finally, Thando Mgqolozana’s novel, A man who is not a man, which deals with the consequences of a botched traditional circumcision. The article argued that self-reflexive critical and imaginative engagement by young people with the cultures that have formed – and deformed – them is a mark of the true coming-of-age of postcolonial and post-apartheid writing.

Highlights

  • The multicultural South African contextAn important part of the postcolonial project – and in the case of South Africa, the postapartheid project – is to recover precolonial and pre-apartheid cultural traditions and practices and to promote indigenous knowledge systems

  • Alongside Western biomedicine, the Traditional Health Practitioners Act (Act No 22 of 2007; Republic of South Africa 2008) legalises and regulates the work of thousands of traditional healers and surgeons, providing it is based on ‘traditional philosophy’, which: means indigenous African techniques, principles, theories, ideologies, beliefs, opinions and customs and uses of traditional medicines communicated from ancestors to descendants or from generations to generations, with or without written documentation, whether supported by science or not, and which are generally used in traditional health practice. (Republic of South Africa 2008:ch 1.1, ln 51–55)

  • Madumo is the kind of hybrid text that, according to Said, reflects the hybridity of the postcolonial and post-imperial world: does Ashforth offer a qualitative sociological study of witchcraft in present-day Soweto, but the figure of his protagonist is representative of the young Black South African in the interspace between conflicting modern and indigenous cultural systems

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Summary

Introduction

The multicultural South African contextAn important part of the postcolonial project – and in the case of South Africa, the postapartheid project – is to recover precolonial and pre-apartheid cultural traditions and practices and to promote indigenous knowledge systems. Many young South Africans inhabit these contradictory ‘inbetween’ cultural spaces where they have to negotiate their identities in different ways.

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