Post-apartheid nostalgia and the future of the black visual archive

dc.contributor.advisorSimbao, Ruth Kerkham, 1969-
dc.contributor.authorNsele, Zamansele Nsikakazi Busisiwe
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-04T10:54:33Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.description.abstractThe implications of nostalgia often strike a discordant note in post-apartheid discourse and this has opened up critical possibilities for research scholarship. For instance, Jacob Dlamini's memoir Native Nostalgia entered the discursive fray in 2009, and it was subsequently followed by Derek Hook's psychoanalytical approach in (Post) apartheid Conditions: Psychoanalysis and Social Formation in 2014. Notably, there is not yet a sustained and intensive research focus that has been conducted on post-apartheid forms of nostalgia within the discipline of art history and visual culture. I present this dissertation as a response to this gap. This thesis identifies mainly two competing nostalgias in post-apartheid South Africa. Through the analysis of selected artwork and media imagery, this dissertation critiques the connections of these nostalgias to the representation of the black figure in post-apartheid visual culture and the implications thereof. I argue that nostalgias for an apartheid-colonial-imperialist past operate through erasure and in the sanitisation of memory and as a result they render suffering indiscernible or in a sadomasochistic way consumes suffering as enjoyable. This thesis simultaneously critiques art work and visual representation that responds to South Africa's nostalgia for the future: a restorative nostalgia that has emerged in the form of "rainbow nationalism" . This is a form of nostalgia that is underpinned by a dogged commitment to triumphalism and as a result erases the ongoing scenes of abjection. I use nostalgia and Afropessimism as analytical frameworks to argue that both real and visual representational forces work in tandem to restrain the future and this, I suggest is fulfilled by the transference of the black body from one state of unfreedom to next, resonating with a cyclical pattern. Frantz Fanon's (1967) Black Skin White Mask forms the conceptual bedrock of my study, particularly his visual layout of "negrophobogenesis" and colonial temporality, which he describes as a "hellish cycle" or as an "infernal cycle" wherein the past overwhelms the present and ideas of the future.
dc.description.degreeDoctoral thesis
dc.description.degreePhD
dc.format.extent290 pages
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.otherhttp://hdl.handle.net/10962/167177
dc.identifier.urihttps://researchrepository.ru.ac.za/handle/123456789/6302
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherRhodes University, Faculty of Humanities, Department of Fine Art
dc.rightsNsele, Zamansele Nsikakazi Busisiwe
dc.subjectNostalgia in art
dc.subjectMemory in art
dc.subjectAfrica -- In art
dc.subjectAfricans in art
dc.subjectFanon, Frantz, 1925-1961. Peau noire, masques blancs. English
dc.subjectSouth Africa -- In art
dc.subjectBlack people in art
dc.titlePost-apartheid nostalgia and the future of the black visual archive
dc.typeAcademic thesis

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