Reckoning With Apartheid: The Conundrum of Working Through the Past
Abstract
From April 26-29, 1994, South Africa held its first universal, democratic elections.
Witnessed by the world, South Africans of all races waited patiently in line to cast
their ballots, signaling the official and symbolic birth of the “new” South Africa.
The subsequent years, marked initially with euphoric hopes for racial healing enabled
by institutional processes such as the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC),
have instead, most recently, inspired deep concern about epidemic levels of HIV/AIDS,
violent crime, state corruption, and unbridled market reforms directed at everything
from property to bodies to babies. Now, seemingly beleaguered state officials deploy
the mantra “TINA” (There Is No Alternative [to neoliberal development]) to fend off
criticism of growing income and wealth disparities. To coincide, more or less, with
the anniversary of 1994—less to commemorate than to signal something about the trajectory
of the past twenty years—we are proposing an interdisciplinary, special theme section
of Comparative Studies in South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East (CSSAAME) entitled
“The Haunted Present: Reckoning After Apartheid” (tentative title). The special theme
section is framed around questions of reckoning in the double sense of both a moral
and practical accounting for historical injury alongside the challenges and failures
of the no-longer “new” South Africa. Against accounts depicting the liberation era
as non-violent and peaceable, more nuanced analysis we argue suggests not only that
South Africa’s “revolution” was marked by both collective and individual violence—on
the part of the state and the liberation movements—but that reckoning with the present
demands of scholars, the media, and cultural commentators that they begin to grapple
more fully with the dimensions and different figurations of South Africa’s violent
colonial history. Indeed, violence and reckoning appear as two central forces in contemporary
South African political, economic, and social life. In response, we are driven to
pose the following questions: In the post-apartheid period, what forms of (individual,
structural) violence have come to bear on South African life? How does this violence
reckon with apartheid and its legacies? Does it in fact reckon with the past? How
can we or should we think about violence as a response to the (failed?) reckoning
of state initiatives like the TRC? What has enabled or enables aesthetic forms—literature,
photography, plastic arts, and other modes of expressive culture—to respond to the
difficulties of South Africa’s ongoing transition? What, in fact, would a practice
or ethic of reckoning defined in the following way look like? ˈrekəniNG/ noun: • the
action or process of calculating or estimating something: last year was not, by any
reckoning, a particularly good one; the system of time reckoning in Babylon • a person’s
view, opinion, or judgment: by ancient reckoning, bacteria are plants • archaic, a
bill or account, or its settlement • the avenging or punishing of past mistakes or
misdeeds: the fear of being brought to reckoning there will be a terrible reckoning
(Oxford English Dictionary) Looking back on the period, just before 1994, is sobering
indeed. At the time, many saw in the energies and courage of those fighting for liberation
the possibilities of a post-racial, post-conflict society. Yet as much as the new
was ushered in, old apartheid forms lingered. Recalling Nadine Gordimer’s invocation
of Gramsci’s “morbid symptoms” more and more it seems “the old is dying and the new
cannot be born” (Gramsci cited in Gordimer 1982). And even as the new began to emerge
other forces—both internal and external to South Africa—redefined the conditions for
transformation. The so-called “new” South Africa, as Jennifer Wenzel has argued, was
really more than anything “the changing face of old oppressions” (Wenzel 2009:159).
The implications for our special theme section of CSSAAME are many. We begin by exploring
the gender, race, and class dimensions of contemporary South African life by way of
its literatures, histories, and politics, its reversion to custom, the claims of ancestors
on the living, in brief, the various cultural expressive modes in which contemporary
South Africa reckons with its past and in so doing accounts, day by day, for the ways
in which the present can be lived, pragmatically. This moves us some distance from
the exercise in “truth and reconciliation” of the earlier post-transition years to
consider more fully the nature of post-conflict, the suturing of old enmities in the
present, and the ways of resolving those lingering suspicions both ordinary and the
stuff of the dark night of the soul (Nelson 2009:xv).
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15549Citation
Counihan, C; Graham, LV; Hoad, N; Makhubu, N; Makhulu, A-M; & Turner, RL (2016). Reckoning With Apartheid: The Conundrum of Working Through the Past. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15549.Collections
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