Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2020
The dramatic reconfiguration of the social, political, and ideological order in South Africa since 1990/1994 has demanded a concomitant reconceptualization of (white) Afrikaner notions of self and belonging in the (new) nation. In this article, we draw on recent developments in the study of varidirectional voicing (polyphony), performance, and mediatization to examine how the South African rap-rave group Die Antwoord makes use of parody and metaparody in their music to critique emerging ‘new Afrikaner’ identities and the racial, class, and gender configurations on which they are based. We also discuss the structural limits of these critiques and the political potential of (meta)parodic performance more generally. ((Meta)parody, polyphony, performance, race, class, gender, South Africa)*
Special thanks to the following for their comments, feedback, and discussion of the arguments presented here: Cecilia Cutler, Andy Gibson, Norma Mendoza-Denton, Philip van der Merwe, Tommaso Milani, Mark de Vos, Quentin Williams, and audience members at North West University in Potchefstroom, South Africa in March 2016 and at the Language, Indexicality, and Belonging conference at the University of Oxford in April 2016. Thanks also to Judith Irvine and two anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments on earlier drafts. We alone are responsible for any remaining errors or shortcomings.