Bio
Sokari is a freelance writer, researcher and amateur geek. She is author of a Pan-African blog Black Looks. She also writes for
 
 
 
 

What’s Hot on BlogHer.com

Recent Comments

Women in South African History: Book Review

  • Share This Post
  • submit
  • 0
  • Sparkle (
    )
     

"Women in South African History" traces the lives of South African women from the pre-colonial, pre-union period (mid 18th century) through to the post-apartheid beginnings and present day South Africa. It is written in four thematic parts: Women in the pre-colonial and pre-union periods; Women in early to mid-twentieth century South Africa; War: armed and mass struggle as gendered experiences; The 1990s and beyond: new identities, new victories, new struggles.

The book is a radical departure from the traditional history texts in that it uses a feminist analysis rather than the "more acceptable gender analysis" in it's approach by examining "the ways in which gender intersects with race, culture, class and other forms of identity and location in South African history". By including the present as part of history the book shows how the past and present are inextricably linked and thus better examines women's experiences over the past 300 years. The experiences of women's struggle and their continuing hazardous journeys towards liberation are expressed through the dual metaphors of "they move boulders" - challenges; and "they cross rivers" - dangers.

Women in South African History goes far beyond the many well known events and periods by feminizing those events and periods where women's participation has never been acknowledged. In the chapter "Like three tongues in one mouth": Tracing the elusive lives of slave women in (slavocratic) South Africa, Pumla Dineo Gqola, brings to life the slave women brought to South Africa from South East Asia, East Africa and Southern Africa. Despite the scarcity of historical and biographical narratives, Pumla is still able to document the lives of some slave women and more importantly the ways in which they resisted and revolted against their enslavement and their central role "to the historical constitution of Afrikaner society". Other examples are women's mass protests against carrying of passes in Bloemfontein and Potchefstroom in 1913; women's involvement in the trade union movement during the 1930s; the participation of women in the ANC underground and military wing in the 1950s; township uprisings in the Eastern Cape in the 1970s and 1980s; naked women protests against lack of housing in Soweto in 1990; migrant women in Johannesburg and women learning to live with HIV/AIDS in present day South Africa.

The book concludes with a powerful essay by Yvette Abrahams in which she chronicles her experience of researching and writing on Sarah Bartman. Or rather searching for the REAL Sarah Bartman not the racialised sexualised object constructed by white male fantasies …a "living specimen of barbaric savage races" one who according to Lindfors [Courting the Hottentot Venus] was willing to collaborate in her own degradation in order to earn more money…

she allowed herself to be exhibited indecently to the European public, and she persisted in this tawdy occupation for more than five years….. She may have been the victim of the cruelist kind of predatory ruthlessness, but her collusion in her own victimisation was unmistakeable…. he concludes.....To put it plainly, she may have engaged in prostitution as well as exhibitionism. Her degradation may have been complete..

Abrahams tears these racist, sexist texts to pieces written not in the 1800s but in the 1980s. Men such as Lindfors were able to pass these lies off as academic text by so called intellectuals. Abrahams leads us through to the convincing conclusion that Sarah Bartman was a slave - a Khoekhoe slave woman. She does this by connecting her own personal herstory to that of the Khoekhoe. Born in the pre-colonial period of the 1780s, she must have had a Khoekhoe name and the only way she could have lost that name at that time was through slavery. Also the only way for her to move from her home in the Western Cape to England was as a slave. Sarah Bartman lied (that she willingly exhibited herself) because she was a slave and knew very well that her words would not be believed over that of a white man and the consequences of her telling the truth would have been too horrible to contemplate such as life imprisonment and even more degradation and abuse.

Abrahams again makes the absolute convincing statement without any hesitation or qualification that the "abuse and degradation" of Sarah Bartman was rape. Rape not only of Sarah but of the whole Khoekhoe nation. The white male racist, sexist texts she quotes in her essay are a form of "surrogate violence" against African women, Black women, Khoekhoe women and Sarah Bartman.

"Was it not rape

  • 0
  • Sparkle (
    )
     

Comments

Post comment as twitter logo facebook logo
Sort: Newest | Oldest