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Reading Affect in Post-Apartheid Literature Mark Libin

Reading Affect in Post-Apartheid Literature By Mark Libin

Reading Affect in Post-Apartheid Literature by Mark Libin


Summary

This book examines South Africa's post-apartheid culture through the lens of affect theory in order to argue that the socio-political project of the new South Africa, best exemplified in their Truth and Reconciliation Commission Hearings, was fundamentally an affective, emotional project.

Reading Affect in Post-Apartheid Literature Summary

Reading Affect in Post-Apartheid Literature: South Africa's Wounded Feelings by Mark Libin

This book examines South Africa's post-apartheid culture through the lens of affect theory in order to argue that the socio-political project of the new South Africa, best exemplified in their Truth and Reconciliation Commission Hearings, was fundamentally an affective, emotional project. Through the TRC hearings, which publicly broadcast the testimonies of both victims and perpetrators of gross human rights violations, the African National Congress government of South Africa, represented by Nelson Mandela and Archbishop Desmond Tutu, endeavoured to generate powerful emotions of contrition and sympathy in order to build an empathetic bond between white and black citizens, a bond referred to frequently by Tutu in terms of the African philosophy of interconnection: ubuntu. This book explores the representations of affect, and the challenges of generating ubuntu, through close readings of a variety of cultural products: novels, poetry, memoir, drama, documentary film and audio anthology.

About Mark Libin

Mark Libin is Associate Professor in the Department of English, Theatre, Film & Media at the University of Manitoba, Canada.



Table of Contents

Chapter One: Apartheid's Bitter Fruit.- Chapter Two: Domestic Bliss.- Chapter Three: Revealing is Healing: Ubuntu, the TRC Hearings, and the Transmission of Affect.- Chapter Four: Seeing and Time: Durational Time in Ubu and the Truth Commission and Long Night's Journey into Day.- Chapter Five: Compassion Fatigue: White Empathy and White Guilt in Antjie Krog's Country of My Skull and J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace.- Chapter Six: Shame, Guilt, and Complicity in Mark Behr's The Smell of Apples and Sindiwe Magona's Mother to Mother.- Chapter Seven: Conclusion: How Close is Too Close? Anger, Reconciliation, and the Born Free Generation.

Additional information

NLS9783030559793
9783030559793
3030559793
Reading Affect in Post-Apartheid Literature: South Africa's Wounded Feelings by Mark Libin
New
Paperback
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
2021-10-14
263
N/A
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