Accent on desire: desire and race in the production of ideological subjectivities in post-apartheid South Africa
OUTPUT TYPE: Journal Article
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2011
TITLE AUTHOR(S): C.Soudien, H.Botsis
KEYWORDS: GOVERNANCE, IDENTITY, POST APARTHEID SOUTH AFRICA, RACE RELATIONS, TRANSFORMATION
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 7077
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/3552
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/3552
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
Abstract
Understanding the transformation of South African institutions requires taking into account the ways in which category maintenance and transgression operate in post-apartheid South Africa. Despite the official ideology of the post-apartheid government being one of no racialism, there are still incongruent messages about identity from all quarters, which learners have to negotiate. We consider how this negotiation is managed through examining South Africans' English accents as a terrain of desire upon which ideological (gendered, raced) subjectivities are formed. We argue that desire is deeply invested in the psycho-social complex of what being white and black is assumed to stand for. Currently, South Africans can deviate from the identity descriptions attributed to them or to which they will attach themselves; however, this deviation involves both transgression and category-maintenance work that simultaneously enables and constrains the (Davies 1989, 29) subject. In narrative research with young South African women (aged 16 to 24), we found that normative whiteness is re-inscribed through constructions of desire as they pertain to accent. We argue that accent acts as a "disruption [that] works at the level of [their] desire to be a particular kind of subject" (Davies 2006, 88).-
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