Theorising Mandela
Nelson Mandela can be said to be the most celebrated leader so far to have emerged from the African continent. He has been variously written about in literary works and history books, differently presented in [auto] biographies and the mainstream media [newspapers and television], fictionalized and...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Unisa Press
2016
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/11408/993 |
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author | Rwafa, Urther |
author_facet | Rwafa, Urther |
author_sort | Rwafa, Urther |
collection | DSpace |
description | Nelson Mandela can be said to be the most celebrated leader so far to have emerged from the African continent. He has been variously written about in literary works and history books, differently presented in [auto] biographies and the mainstream media [newspapers and television], fictionalized and actualised in film, immortalised through art work such as painting and sculpture. In liberal- driven South African and western media, Mandela is/was presented as a ‘messiah’, a superhuman character, a humanist, a philanthropist, and a persona who works as an ideal model for what should constitute modem African political leadership. Yet in some academic circles Mandela is viewed as “a terrorist-turned-politician” (Willcock, 2013: 1), a political and ideological ‘construct’ of the western world; a framed 'dramatis persona ’ by the western media to project and deepen the colonialist agenda in Africa. This article seeks to theorise Mandela and in the process draw some justifications to the worthiness or the shallowness of labels attributed to Mandela as a symbolic figure that embodied the values of “Africanness” and “ubuntuism” or as an “African Cyborg” that was created and controlled by the western world. The article also attempts to locate and expose to the surface the different layers of present day South African challenges—which can be attributed to the legacy left by Mandela, but are often concealed by the ruling government under the carpet of “Rainbow Nation” and a blind celebration of “National reconciliation”. |
format | Article |
id | ir-11408-993 |
institution | My University |
language | English |
publishDate | 2016 |
publisher | Unisa Press |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | ir-11408-9932022-06-27T13:49:07Z Theorising Mandela Rwafa, Urther Theorising Mandela South Africa Western media African leadership National reconciliation Nelson Mandela can be said to be the most celebrated leader so far to have emerged from the African continent. He has been variously written about in literary works and history books, differently presented in [auto] biographies and the mainstream media [newspapers and television], fictionalized and actualised in film, immortalised through art work such as painting and sculpture. In liberal- driven South African and western media, Mandela is/was presented as a ‘messiah’, a superhuman character, a humanist, a philanthropist, and a persona who works as an ideal model for what should constitute modem African political leadership. Yet in some academic circles Mandela is viewed as “a terrorist-turned-politician” (Willcock, 2013: 1), a political and ideological ‘construct’ of the western world; a framed 'dramatis persona ’ by the western media to project and deepen the colonialist agenda in Africa. This article seeks to theorise Mandela and in the process draw some justifications to the worthiness or the shallowness of labels attributed to Mandela as a symbolic figure that embodied the values of “Africanness” and “ubuntuism” or as an “African Cyborg” that was created and controlled by the western world. The article also attempts to locate and expose to the surface the different layers of present day South African challenges—which can be attributed to the legacy left by Mandela, but are often concealed by the ruling government under the carpet of “Rainbow Nation” and a blind celebration of “National reconciliation”. 2016-04-24T14:39:03Z 2016-04-24T14:39:03Z 2015 Article 2078-9785 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/993 en Imbizo International Journal of Literary and Comparative Studies;Vol. 15, no. 1 open Unisa Press |
spellingShingle | Theorising Mandela South Africa Western media African leadership National reconciliation Rwafa, Urther Theorising Mandela |
title | Theorising Mandela |
title_full | Theorising Mandela |
title_fullStr | Theorising Mandela |
title_full_unstemmed | Theorising Mandela |
title_short | Theorising Mandela |
title_sort | theorising mandela |
topic | Theorising Mandela South Africa Western media African leadership National reconciliation |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/11408/993 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT rwafaurther theorisingmandela |