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7 - Shame and identity: the case of the coloured in South Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

Zoë Wicomb
Affiliation:
University of Strathclyde
Derek Attridge
Affiliation:
University of York
Rosemary Jolly
Affiliation:
Queen's University, Ontario
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Summary

…Also: brown contains black – (?) – How would a person behave for us to say of him that he knows a pure, primary brown? We must always bear in mind the question: How do people learn the meaning of colour names?

wittgenstein, Remarks on Colour

In the 1980s South Africans discovered the Khoi/coloured woman Saartje Baartman, once known as the Hottentot Venus, who was exhibited in London and Paris from 1810 to her death in 1815. In nineteenth century Europe, as Sander Gilman points out, the display of her spectacular steatopygia and its generation of medical discourse on the Khoi genitalia established the iconographic link between the black woman and sexual lasciviousness (‘Black Bodies, White Bodies’, 216). Since the last decade has seen her well referenced in South African visual art and writing, popular outrage has moved the government to apply to France for the return of Baartman, whose remains are still held by the Musée de l'homme in Paris (though they were removed from public display in the 1980s). Having in the New South Africa become an icon of postcoloniality, Baartman's case can be seen as one of several initiatives towards reconstructing a national cultural past.

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Writing South Africa
Literature, Apartheid, and Democracy, 1970–1995
, pp. 91 - 107
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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