Wednesday, 16 March 2016

A Reasonable Man

What is Reasonable?

Image from Wikipedia


A Reasonable Man (1999) features around a young black man's conviction of murder and a white lawyer trying to come to terms with the past. Sipho, played by Loyiso Gxwala, is an inhabitant of Zululand in KZN. He kills a one year old child in his village thinking it is a “Tikoloshe” (an evil spirit). Under the South African laws, Sipho is seen as a murderer and convicted of murder. His lawyer, Sean, tries to plead his case that the murder was not intent but the belief that Sipho was killing an evil spirit.

The movie directed and written by Gavin Hood is a low budget feature film, but this does not under value the movie in any sort of way. The movie deals not only with cultural differences and beliefs in a diverse country like South Africa but also the psychological damages of war on an individual.

Hood stars as the lawyer who tries to proof innocence in Sipho. He gives a convincing performance as someone in psychological pain, although you forget throughout the movie that he, himself killed a child during the war, where Sipho killed a child thinking it was an evil spirit. The movie could have explored the idea of running the story of Sean and Sipho parallel so that the viewers see the similarities in their stories and the psychological trauma they both suffer. Gxwala gives a convincing performance of a young man trying to plead his innocence.

A Reasonable Man focuses on the diverse cultures and traditions that South Africa has and how one tries to justify the concept of a “reasonable man”. What is reasonable in certain cultures or contexts and how do we who are outside of these cultures understand this reason? The movie also looks at two individuals who are from very different backgrounds but share a personal battle that has some relation to each other.


Further Reading:
The Past is Very Much Part of the Present

Friday, 11 March 2016

The Construction of Eugene Marais as an Afrikaner Hero by Sandra Swart

Eugene Marais (1871 -1936) was instrumental to literature within South Africa and was also a scientist focusing on the behaviour of primates and ants. While not being as well known for his scientific work, he is hailed as the, “father of Afrikaans poetry”, due to his contributions to literature and the Afrikaans language (Swart 847). It is within this vein that Marais is represented as a great Afrikaner who was part of the Afrikaner nationalist movement. Marais is, however, also remembered as an Afrikaner rebel, a “dissident iconoclast” (Swart 847).

It is with these two different representations of Marais that Sandra Swart investigates Marais as a hero for the Afrikaans language and populace of South Africa in her article, The Construction of Eugene Marais as an Afrikaner Hero. Swart’s investigation into the construction of Marais’ image as an Afrikaner hero is done in three distinct manners.

Firstly, the article looks at how Marais has been portrayed within particular historical moments by, “[analysing] the changes that have occurred with reference to broader developments in South Africa”, (Swart 847). This is done through the exploration of the, “material changes within the socio-economic milieu”, with these changes essentially being the reason for Marais’ constant public image changes (Swart 847). Marais’ as an idol Afrikaner was vital to the cultural identity of the re-imagined Afrikaner nation, strengthening nationalist ideals and forwarding nationalism.

Marais being the first “Afrikaner poet”, filled the need for an Afrikaans poet, and is thus, “celebrated as a powerful figure in the establishment of the Afrikaans language and culture” (Swart 850).  Marais is difficult to categorise within the Afrikaans canon though, with his work spanning four poetic generations and finding his poetry within two schools of thought. The two schools of thought on his poetry are the Language Movement’s stable and the Afrikaans literary firmament.  

During, and after Marais’ death, his image was subject to change due to the socio-political context of the Afrikaans language struggle. It is with this in mind that Swart’s second manner of exploration into Marais’ image as an Afrikaner hero is grounded. The change in Marais’ image is traced within the projected self-image of the Afrikaner over the 20th century. It is almost entirely because of Gustav Preller, a long time friend and advocate of Marais, that his image as a "true" or "good" Afrikaner is established (Swart 855). Preller establishes Marais as the 'first poet' and through this establishment, creates the ground to mould Marais' image as a simple afrikaner, while ignoring Marais', "identification with decadence and aestheticism", as well as his, "cosmopolitan tastes and leaning towards morphine" (Swart 856).  Marais was portrayed to Afrikaner South Africans, and other South Africans, as to what an ideal Afrikaans individual would be, and this portrayal was often adjusted to what was needed over time, but it remains entrenched in the ideal of being a simple and 'good' Afrikaner.

Finally, Swart sets an exploration into the need for ‘alternative heroes’ in the ‘new South Africa’. Understanding that Marais’ image as an ‘Afrikaner rebel’ and someone who stood in opposition to, "the 'obscurantism' of Kruger",  is well suited for this need of an alternate hero (Swart 866). This secondary representation of Marais as a ‘dissident iconoclast’ is the reason for the fragmented meaning of his image. It is with this representation of Marais that he is used as a figure in the reinvention of the Afrikaner in  post-Aparthied South Africa, being now viewed as a, "genuine Afrikaner 'tragic genius'" (Swart 866). 

Works cited:

Swart, S. “The Construction of Eugene Marais as an Afrikaner Hero.” Journal of Southern African Studies 30.4 (December, 2004): 847-867. JSTOR. Web. 07 March 2011. 

For those interested in Gustav Preller, here is a link with a little more information on him:

Wednesday, 9 March 2016

Rousseau, Levaillant, Marais

Jean-Jacques Rousseau, born in Geneva, was an 18th century philosopher and writer. Claude Levi-Strauss, a French anthropologist and ethnologist, called Rousseau's Discourse on the Origins of Inequality the beginning of anthropology. This was stated partly because of it's self-questioning stance and partly because “of its consideration of links between human and primate behaviour” (Glenn 62). Levi-Strauss sees Rousseau as the founder, while other researches argue that Rousseau can be seen as the first Enlightenment figure, supposing that there is a link between particular species, “the relation between apes and men” (Glenn 63). Rousseau tried to find the missing link between primate and man in his Discourse on the Origins of Inequality (Glenn 63). Rousseau speculated that travellers who claim to have seen primates that look like men might have been confused and seen animals instead of men, these travellers might have judged simply on external characteristics (Glenn 63). There are sections in Rousseau's Discourse that developed the idea that to move away from being savage to a more civilised state it involves “a complex economy of sensory, psychological and social losses and gains” (Glenn 64). This sense of lost capacities and possibilities influenced both Levaillant and Marias (Glenn 64).

The French explorer Francois Levaillant, an 18th century travel writer, was a pioneering figure in South African ornithology, zoology, and ethology as well as in anthropology (Glenn 65). Levaillant worked from what he found in the field, he felt that Rousseau had a false and distorted view of the Hottentots. Levaillent attacks Rousseau's work and views of the Hottentots and he criticised Rousseau for “relying on second-hand accounts” from other writers (Glenn 66). However, Levaillant's self-justification in the “prière d'insérer” saw himself as agreeing with Rousseau's challenge in finding a “philosophy that travels” (Glenn 66). Levaillant seemed to describe African people without prejudice and shared another view with Rousseau, the idea of the “Noble savage” and the condemnation of civilization. Levaillant had a relationship with a Khoekhoe woman in Gonaqua called Narina, his relationship with her would be frowned upon and seen as social unacceptable in the later colonial period. “Levaillant's legacy to South African literature of the nineteenth century was generally as a political critic of colonialism” (Glenn 70). Levaillant was able to see the Hottentots and Gonaquois as completely human, this meant that he worked with “the conventions of classicism to depict black bodies as beautiful” (Glenn 70).

Eugene Marais, a South African poet, writer and naturalist, is well-known for his contribution to Afrikaans literature although, he is little less know for his contribution to science. His book, Souls of the Ape, “aspires to the high detached scientific tone,” which echoes Freud as Marais recounts various experiments he performed in hypnosis (Glenn 72). Marais' 19th century reading of Darwin created a scale that put blacks closer to baboons and was inevitably racist (Glenn 72). His central concern of his theory of ethnology and anthropology was “the cost of the transition from savage man to civilised, animal to human” (Glenn 73). Marais saw that there was an inherent weakness in the stage of development and way of life for the Bushman (Glenn 73). It is ironic that in his chapter “Addiction and Depression” - Marais comments that the Bushman “may be closer to him, or the universal condition, than the cynical exploiters” (Glenn 74). Marais discovered the Waterberg Cycad which was also named after him (Encephalartos eugene-maraisii). Marais is also known as the first person to study the behaviour of wild primates.


The main theme in the late 19th century literature “is the tension between high pretension and 'the horror' of primal drives and forces” (Glenn 75). Marais can be seen as being closer to Rousseau's work than Levaillant, in the sense of the movement of man from primate to savage (Glenn 75). Rousseau, Levaillant and Marais share different and similar findings in their work about the 'savage man'. It is interesting to note that although some saw the Hottentots as human, they were never seen as fully human.


Links:



Works Cited:
Glenn, Ian. “Primate Time: Rousseau, Levaillant, Marais”. Current Writing: Text and Reception in Southern Africa, 18.1 (2011): 61-77. Print.




Thursday, 3 March 2016

Olive Schreiner: 19th Century: The Men and Women's Club

The Men and Women's Club was a discussion group which challenged the norms for male and female relationships as well as the ideas of sexuality (Edwardian Promenade). Karl Pearson, a barrister, formed this club to have more focused discussions based on all subjects important to both sexes. The group formally started in 1885 with the aim for men and women to discuss subjects openly and freely (Ruth and Scott 146). Discussions regarding sexuality in Victorian England were very radical for the time, especially since these conversations were shared by men and women together. The culture of the Victorian time “refused middle-class women knowledge about their bodies while stigmatizing the prostitute as being 'outside' society” (Ruth and Scott 146). The club wanted to bring men and women together by finding an alternative split “between 'animal' and 'human' that characterised the dominant mid- and late- Victorian attitudes to sexual passion” (Ruth and Scott 146).

The club's first paper was from Pearson called “The Woman Question”, which was later reprinted, with changes, “in a collection of essays entitled The Ethic of Freethought” (Ruth and Scott 149). In the paper he focused on changes that would happen if women received access to education, professions and political representation (Edwardian Promenade).

Olive Schreiner, daughter of a missionary, was one of the most well-known female members of the group. Schreiner and Bryan Donkin joined the Men and Women's Club during the first year of it starting. They were more interested in the “non-recognition of female sexuality as a whole” (Ruth and Scott 150).

Schreiner was open in her “challenge of commonly-held conceptions of women sexuality” and argued against the notion that women have a weaker sexual instinct than men, observing that it was difficult to judge the 'days when women are under such control'” (Edwardian Promenade; First and Scott 150). Donkin on the other hand saw that Pearson “underestimated women's 'sexual passion' and overestimated the maternal instinct” (Ruth and Scott 150).

Schreiner's openness classified her as a 'free' woman, although she was pinpointed as having neurosis, which in Victorian times was a condition of a “woman seeking a sort of sexual freedom by denying her sexuality” (Ruth and Scott 151). Schreiner wanted to look for a theory of sexual evolution for women and in her personal relationship with Pearson was a way to show that she wanted freedom from sex or “the risk of being considered and treated as a sexual object” (Ruth and Scott 151-152).

One of the core issues of the Men and Women's Club was prostitution and they would probably have read literature about different Acts relating to prostitution (Ruth and Scott 157). The Contagious Diseases Acts, required that prostitutes in certain garrison towns and ports go for a full physical examination and detention in 'lock' hospitals (Ruth and Scott 157). The Club, however, struggled to fully define what a prostitute is but Schreiner felt that individual relationships sullied around prostitution (Ruth and Scott 157).

Topics discussed by the Men and Women’s Club were revolutionary and radical for the late 19th century, during this time “long-held assumptions and social norms” were challenged by both men and women (Edwardian Promenade).

Works Cited:
First, Ruth, and Ann Scott. Olive Schreiner: A Biography. London: André Deutsch, 1980. Print.
Holland, Evangeline. Edwardian Promenade, 13 Dec.2009. Web. 2 March 2016.

Further Reading:
Edwardian Promenade

The Olive Schreiner Letters Online


Wednesday, 2 March 2016

Herbert Spencer and Social Darwinism

Herbert Spencer, (27 April 1820 - 8 December 1903), is best known for his theory on Social Darwinism, although he is also known for his Synthetic Philosophy and his ideas regarding Progress or the Law of Evolution. Spencer was an English philosopher, biologist, anthropologist, sociologist, and prominent classical liberal political theorist of the Victorian Era and is well known for coining the term, "survival of the fittest" in Principles of Biology (1864). While Spencer worked within a wide array of disciplines, and is associated with many theories, I will be focusing  solely on his theory of Social Darwinism.

Social Darwinism is a social theory that applies the laws of survival to a society, which is essentially the concept of adaptability and competition within a social context, and is used to explain the social struggle evident in society for existence. The idea of competition within a society rests on the basis that there is competition within an economic and political sense, as these two fields being integral in the progression of humanity. Essentially, Social Darwinism is used to describe social progress or evolution.

Spencer did not however, simply appropriate Darwin's biological ideas of progress or survival, (Natural Selection), but rather incorporated it into his preexisting synthetic philosophical system. Spencer's evolutionary ideas are based on Lamark's idea that organs are developed or diminished depending on use and disuse. this evolutionary mechanism is necessary to explain the social development of society, and more broadly, humanity. Spencer's idea regarding social evolution has direction and an endpoint and once it reaches an apex, it will achieve a final state of equilibrium. In this sense, evolution means progress, improvement, and eventually the perfection of the social organism, in this case being society.      

Within the coming weeks I will also try and provide more information on the influence that Herbert Spencer had on other academics, focusing specifically on Olive Schreiner and her literary work.

Follow these links for more information on Social Darwinism and Herbert Spencer. Another person of interest is Jean-Baptiste Lamark, who Spencer based his evolutionary ideas on. A link providing information on Lamark is also made available here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Baptiste_Lamarck

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_Spencer#Social_Darwinism

https://www.boundless.com/sociology/textbooks/boundless-sociology-textbook/sociology-1/the-history-of-sociology-23/spencer-and-social-darwinism-149-3119/

Gustav Fritsch's photographs taken on his travels to Southern Africa


These are a few of the photographs that Gustav Fristch took while travelling in Southern Africa. As I discussed in my "Gossip column" last week, Fristch took various photographs of individuals while on his travels in Southern Africa and these images below represent his "honorific" portraiture. His focus on the ethnographic-cultural aspect of these photographs are quite clear as he encouraged his subjects to wear their own accessories and ornamentation. Unfortunately, I was not able to get more of his "repressive" photographs, nor was I able to get much information on the subjects of his photographs, other than their names and that they ranged from converted native inhabitants, Khoi San and Xhosa individuals. Where I am able, I will provide more information on a subject next to a photograph. I hope everyone enjoys these photographs.       

                                     'Mickie, Gonna Hottentot, Harrismith'. Taken October 1864

                                                            'Cuenyane, Barolong Tribe'

                                    'Zazini, First Counsel of Anta, Windvogelberg. Taken in 1864'

                             'Boessek Bushman, Bain's farm, Orange Free State. Taken 8 April 1864'

                             'Carlo Bushman, Bain's farm, Orange Free State. Taken 8 April 1864'

        'Joh Nakin, Mosuto native teacher, Shiloh'. Taken between 1-3 February 1864'




Tuesday, 1 March 2016

Upcoming Postings: a summary

Dear Both

Just a quickie to confirm the posting commitments this week:

Thandi will do an "article summary" of the chapter in the Scott and First biography on Schreiner that deals with the "Men's and Women's Club", and their discussions of sexology and social conditions in Victorian England. Because this is an intense piece of reading which she only received on Monday, and the written piece will be a substantial one, she will post by 11 am on Friday morning, and we will comment within 24 hours of that post.

Gustav has committed himself to post a "trivia" column on Herbert Spencer and Social Darwinist ideas. This will come in at  the usual time by 5 pm Wednesday (today).

Hope I've got it right?

For next week Wednesday and Friday, we can, and should!, continue with the discussion of social Darwinist ideas, but I will also need volunteers to write about Eugene Marais. Two articles on his work are going up on Google Drive today - so please have a look and see if you would like to summarise or review either of them for next week.  We can watch Die Wonderwerker together in Montagu next weekend.

All the best,

Lannie